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Emergencies clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT00448123 Completed - Kidney Stones Clinical Trials

The Efficacy of Tamsulosin in the Treatment of Ureteral Stones in Emergency Department Patients

Start date: February 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To determine if emergency department patients with acute ureteral colic pain due to a ureteral stone who are treated with tamsulosin, versus placebo, will experience a shorter time to passage of their stone or resolution of their pain. A secondary study objective will be to determine if there is a relationship between response to tamsulosin and stone size or position in the ureter.

NCT ID: NCT00443183 Completed - Hazardous Drinking Clinical Trials

Emergency Physician Brief Interventions for Alcohol

Start date: May 2002
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Patients with hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption are at increased risk for adverse health consequences and have frequent visits to the Emergency Department(ED). Despite research that has demonstrated the prevalence of alcohol problems in ED patients, there are limited data on the effectiveness of brief intervention (BI) strategies for patients in this setting. The purpose of the current study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a brief intervention, termed Brief Negotiation Interview (BNI), provided by emergency practitioners (EPs-emergency physicians and physician assistants), in reducing alcohol consumption in ED patients with hazardous and harmful drinking. In a controlled randomized clinical trial of 500 patients with hazardous and harmful drinking, BNI will be compared to scripted discharge instructions (DI). Three hypotheses will be tested: BNI is superior to DI in: 1) reducing alcohol consumption; 2) reducing the number of binge drinking episodes; and 3) increasing utilization of primary care or alcohol-related services. Alcohol consumption and utilization of primary care or alcohol-related services will be measured by self-report at 1,6 and 12 months. An additional benefit to changing patterns of consumption and utilization of health services may be decreased ED visits and alcohol-related hospitalizations. These will be assessed utilizing a statewide database. In order to facilitate real-world application of BNI in the ED, the project will result in a BNI manual for EPs and an adherence and competence scale. Unique features of the current project as compared to earlier studies include: 1)use of a credible control condition; 2) enrollment of a heterogeneous population; 3)use of a manual-guided intervention by existing ED staff; 4)systematic assessment of adherence and competence to ensure quality administration and discriminability of interventions; 5)monitoring of use of ancillary treatments; and 6)monitoring of repeat ED visits and alcohol-related hospitalizations.

NCT ID: NCT00435890 Completed - Acute Illness Clinical Trials

Triage Liaison Physician - Evaluation of a Novel Approach to Address Emergency Department Overcrowding

Start date: December 2005
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This randomized controlled trial will introduce a triage liaison physician (TLP) into the University of Alberta Hospital Emergency Department (ED) and assess the influence on patients who leave without being seen, ED length of stay, and other ED Overcrowding outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT00433004 Completed - Post Partum Clinical Trials

Advance Supply of Emergency Contraception Compared to Routine Postpartum Care in Teens

Start date: February 2007
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This is a pilot randomized controlled trial to assess the effects of advanced supply of emergency contraception versus routine care in a teen postpartum population. The goals are to assess feasibility of recruiting and retaining postpartum teens; to obtain estimates of the prevalence of (use of Plan B, primary contraceptive continuation, unprotected intercourse exposure, and pregnancy rates), in postpartum teens given advanced supply of Plan B; to assess whether or not (lack of use of Plan B, contraceptive method non-continuation, and unprotected intercourse exposure), are surrogate markers for risk of unintended pregnancy.

NCT ID: NCT00413712 Completed - Clinical trials for Supraventricular Tachycardia

Effectiveness of Calcium Channel Blockers and Adenosine in the Emergency Management of SVT

Start date: January 1997
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy and effectiveness of calcium channel blockers and adenosine in the treatment of Supraventricular Tachycardia.

NCT ID: NCT00411684 Completed - Clinical trials for Emergency Contraception

Safety and Efficacy of CDB-2914 for Emergency Contraception

Start date: November 2006
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of CDB-2914 for preventing pregnancy when taken 3 to 5 days after unprotected sexual intercourse.

NCT ID: NCT00392145 Completed - Dehydration Clinical Trials

Emergency Department Rapid Intravenous Rehydration (RIVR) for Pediatric Gastroenteritis

Start date: November 2006
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This study will look at children with dehydration secondary to gastroenteritis requiring IV rehydration and determine whether the proportion rehydrated after two hours is greater in the children who receive rapid intravenous rehydration (RIVR) or in the children who receive standard IV rehydration.

NCT ID: NCT00388830 Completed - Clinical trials for Gallbladder Diseases

Emergency Ultrasound of the Gallbladder

Start date: May 2006
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether fasting for 8 hours prior to ultrasonography for cholelithiasis (gallbladder pain) is needed.

NCT ID: NCT00385476 Completed - Advanced Cancer Clinical Trials

Cancer Patients' Medication Knowledge in the Emergency Center

Start date: August 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The goal of the study is to learn about patients' knowledge of their medications in an outpatient acute care setting (such as the M. D. Anderson Emergency Center) and to learn about any clinical factors that affect patients' knowledge of their medications.

NCT ID: NCT00382434 Completed - Clinical trials for Adverse Drug Event, Potential Adverse Drug Event, and Quality Measures

Emergency Pharmacist Safety Study

Start date: August 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The Emergency Department (ED) is a unique environment in medicine, and many safety mechanisms used in other hospital settings cannot be applied in the ED. For example, clinical pharmacists have traditionally provided extra layers of protection to hospital inpatients by cross-checking provider orders for appropriate dosing, contraindications, and interactions. Because medications in the ED must be accessed immediately and are often one-time doses, the use of central pharmacy services would introduce an unacceptable delay to the administration of medication. Although some hospitals have programs in place in which a pharmacist responds to the ED for cardiac arrests or trauma team activations, few have reported programs which involve a clinical pharmacist assigned exclusively to the emergency department. Nonetheless, published reports have asserted that ED-based pharmacists can increase patient safety. Although this concept appears logical, no study has attempted to show that these programs reduce potential adverse drug events in the ED. We propose to implement and optimize an ED Pharmacist (EDP) program as a safe practice intervention in a large ED. The hospital has provided funding for two permanent full time positions starting at the beginning of the award period. In the initial phase interviews of physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and patients will be conducted and the results will be used to optimize the EDP role. A large-scale chart review study will then be conducted to evaluate whether there is a reduction in frequency of potential and adverse drug events during times that the EDP is on duty. Staff perceptions of the effectiveness of this program will also be evaluated. The overall goal of this initiative is to create an effective EDP program that will decrease the rate of adverse drug events in ED patients, and to create a "toolkit" to facilitate the introduction of similar programs into other EDs. This toolkit will include a description of the formal, optimized role of the EDP, challenges and solutions in implementation, and evidence to support the efficacy of such a program.