View clinical trials related to Emergencies.
Filter by:Describe and analyze routes and modes of care for patients in emergency consultant in various emergency care and public psychiatric outpatient devices to provide useful information to optimize trajectories taken into psychiatric load on the Eurométropole territory upstream and downstream of where they viewed urgently.
With an ageing population, hip fractures are likely to become a significant public health burden. Hip fracture surgery is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Patient outcomes and experience underpin the National Health Service (NHS) Constitution in driving quality improvement and performance. We aim to conduct a qualitative research study to ascertain the important patient and carer reported experience measures following hip fracture surgery in the elderly to improve quality of care and service provision. To learn about patient and care-giver experience to ascertain which aspects are important to patients and what can be improved.
Currently, Paracetamol and Ibuprofen are widely used by emergency physicians in Turkey for the pain treatments. The objective of the study was to assess whether intravenous Paracetamol has superior Low Back Pain reduction will compare with Ibuprofen in emergency department (ED) adults. Half of the participants will receive Paracetamol and the other half will receive Ibuprofen.
Emergency ultrasound examinations are increasingly important diagnostic tools in emergency and critical care medicine. This study wants to analyze different types of education for undergraduate students. Any method of medical training will be proved theoretical and in clinical practice.
Rocuronium, a nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking agent, is used in general anesthesia to provide conditions for endotracheal intubating. Recommended dose is 0,6 mg/kg and 90 seconds after intravenous injection, patients can be intubated. Anxiety levels may vary in patients undergoing emergency and elective surgery. Patients undergoing emergency surgery may display exaggerated laryngoscopic responses. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of patient anxiety levels on the onset time of rocuronium in terms of anxiety scores and train of four (TOF) 0.1 times.
Tuberculosis (TB) control remains a public health challenge. Many people in the UK do not have a general practitioner (GP) registration and their only interaction with the NHS is via Accident and Emergency (A&E) Departments of hospitals. This is often the case for those in hard to reach groups, who are also those often at highest risk of TB. This study seeks to assess whether A&E Departments are effective sites for the identification and onward management of TB, both in its latent and active forms.
The study aims to test whether it is possible to reduce pressure on Emergency Departments by sending a personal feedback letter to people who have recently attended an Emergency Department and whose health issues could likely have been dealt with elsewhere. These attendances clearly have many causes. However, it is likely that some attendances are due to behavioural factors - in other words, the various ways in which users interact with services. This study focuses on one particular behavioural factor: lack of feedback to users making avoidable visits. The study will take place in collaboration with an NHS hospital trust. Each week during the trial, the hospital trust will identify those Emergency Department attendances in the last seven days which, according to clinical judgement, could have been dealt with elsewhere. Patients will then be randomly selected to receive a letter containing information on alternative healthcare options for non-emergency health concerns. Patient records will be analysed to determine whether the patients who received the letter are less likely to make an avoidable repeat visit to the Emergency Department in the future, compared with patients who received no letter.
This study will enroll patients presenting to the emergency department with acute suicidal ideation meeting inclusion and exclusion criteria. Patients will be randomized to one of three arms: ketamine (intervention) or diphenhydramine (control) or placebo (control). Serial measurements will be made in the ED and at follow-up intervals.
The researcher's primary hypothesis is that VCE allows for safe outpatient management of ED patients with suspected upper GI hemorrhage. A prospective multicenter randomized control trial was designed to investigate the safety of this approach.
Acute low back pain is a common cause for emergency department visits. Controversy remains regarding the optimal medication for acute low back pain relief. The investigators hypothesized that administration of pharmacological anxiolysis in addition to analgesia will improve pain relief and patient management in the emergency department.