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Drowning clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06334276 Not yet recruiting - Drowning Clinical Trials

Developing an Utstein-style Danish Drowning Registry: Nationwide Fatal and Nonfatal Drowning Data Since 2016

DROWN_INHOS
Start date: January 1, 2025
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This nationwide, registry-based study aims to link Danish Prehospital Drowning Data data with inhospital data to develop a Utstein-style Danish Drowning Registry. This study will report mortality and neurological outcomes 30 days after a drowning incident since 2016.

NCT ID: NCT06327893 Not yet recruiting - Drowning Clinical Trials

Patients Treated by the Danish Emergency Medical Services Following Non-drowning Water Rescues From 2016 to 2023

RESCUE
Start date: May 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Since 2015, all Danish prehospital EMS have used the nationwide Prehospital Electronic Medical Record (PEMR). In 2023, the investigators developed the Danish Drowning Formula (DDF), a text-search algorithm designed to search the unstructured text fields in the electronic medical records with comprehensive search criteria to identify all potential water-related incidents. This protocol describes the first study to analyse the prehospital data from a nationwide Danish cohort of patients treated by the EMS from 2016 to 2023 following non-drowning aquatic rescues.

NCT ID: NCT06312202 Not yet recruiting - Drowning Clinical Trials

Drowning Incidents in Danish Harbours

DROWN_HARBOR
Start date: May 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

A recent study reported significantly increased mortality from drowning-related out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Danish harbours compared to other public places (e.g., public pools, coastlines, and lakes). Accurate and reliable data are necessary before establishing specific educational, preventative, rescue, or treatment strategies to reduce the number of drowning incidents in Danish harbours and improve survival. Therefore, it is essential to characterise drowning incidents in Danish harbours and analyse risk factors associated with fatal drowning.

NCT ID: NCT06310499 Not yet recruiting - Drowning Clinical Trials

Primary or Secondary Drowning

DROWN_COD
Start date: August 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

According to WHO's rules, any death certificate must state the underlying cause of death and contributory causes of death may also be stated. Differentiating between primary and secondary drowning is difficult, as information preceding the drowning incident is rarely available. Yet, knowing the most frequent causes of secondary drowning may provide useful information to healthcare professionals working in prehospital Emergency Medical Services, as this may affect prehospital treatment.

NCT ID: NCT06310486 Not yet recruiting - Drowning Clinical Trials

The Emergency Call on Drowning

DROWN_CALL
Start date: May 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims to 1) describe patient-, setting-, and dispatcher-related characteristics in drowning-related emergency calls to the Emergency Medical Dispatch Centre (1-1-2 emergency phone) and 2) factors associated with 30-day survival. The investigators will separately analyse drowning-related out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) and drowning-related non-OHCA. If feasible, the investigators will qualitatively analyse the calls to identify and describe potential barriers for an optimal handling strategy.

NCT ID: NCT06183827 Not yet recruiting - Drowning Clinical Trials

Drowning-related Acute Respiratory Failure

CPAPDROWNING
Start date: April 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to assess the Non-Invasive Ventilation-Continuous Positive Airway Pressure efficacy (experimental group) for drowning related Acute Respiratory Failure compared to Oxygen Supply by face mask (15Liters/minutes) (control group).

NCT ID: NCT05977530 Not yet recruiting - Drowning Clinical Trials

Teaching Young Children Swim Survival Skills

Start date: September 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is designed to evaluate whether commercially-available swim self-rescue schools are effective to teach children ages 12-23 months to stay safely alive floating in the water (or grasping the pool's edge) without adult intervention. The investigators will measure children's water self-rescue skills at baseline and then they will engage in commercially-available training over the course of several weeks. The investigators will then measure their skills again. Assessments will be conducted using a standardized protocol with a certified lifeguard present. Parents will also complete a short survey concerning child and family demographics and child and family swim and lifeguard training experience.