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Emergencies clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02731924 Completed - Acute Appendicitis Clinical Trials

Point of Care Ultrasound for Evaluation of Suspected Appendicitis in the Emergency Department

Start date: May 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The primary purpose of this study is to determine the accuracy of ultrasound (US) in diagnosing appendicitis in emergency department (ED) patients, as compared to the criterion standards of computed tomography, operative reports, or discharge diagnosis. The secondary purposes of the study include evaluation of the effect of ultrasound for appendicitis on the patient length of stay in the emergency department, the diagnostic utility of specific ultrasound findings in the diagnosis of appendicitis, the role of body mass index (BMI) in the utility of ultrasound for appendicitis and relation of ultrasound findings to the Alvarado score. The study will also examine the inter-rater agreement between point-of- care sonographers' interpretation and blinded reviewers' interpretation of the ultrasound images.

NCT ID: NCT02721927 Completed - Emergency Clinical Trials

The Use of Emergency Department by Syrian Refugees and the Increasing Cost of Health Care

Start date: January 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Since the beginning of the Syria conflict in March 2011, more than 10 million Syrians were forced to leave their homes and sought refuge in neighboring countries.

NCT ID: NCT02720315 Completed - Pain Clinical Trials

Intensive Cryotherapy in the Emergency Department for Acute Musculoskeletal Injuries

Start date: February 1, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Acute musculoskeletal (MSK) injuries, including strains, sprains or contusions, are a common reason patients seek emergency care. Pain control is an essential component of treatment. Within the orthopedic literature, there is robust body of research supporting the use of cryotherapy for post-operative patients and injured athletes. However, within the emergency department (ED), studies have been focused on pharmacologic analgesia. The absence of evidence on optimal method or impact of ice therapy for acute MSK injuries contributes to inconsistent practice patterns that may impede symptom control or increase narcotic usage. The specific aim of the ICED investigation is to evaluate the effectiveness of intensive cryotherapy for the treatment of pain due to acute MSK injuries treated in the ED. Secondary outcomes include length-of-stay (LOS), patient satisfaction, and narcotic usage.

NCT ID: NCT02719509 Completed - Dyspnea Clinical Trials

Emergency Department Cardiac Ultrasound

Start date: February 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

This is a prospective observational study evaluating the diagnostic utility of cardiac ultrasound in patients who present to the emergency department with undifferentiated chest pain or shortness of breath. Emergency department providers will be interviewed before and after the completion of a cardiac ultrasound to determine if the ultrasound resulted in any changes in management. Other outcomes include determination of incidence of unexpected findings.

NCT ID: NCT02712450 Completed - Clinical trials for Emergency Geriatric Care

Tools Development for Geriatric Emergency Regulation

REGESA
Start date: January 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

According to surveys, 13% to 20% of the Service Médical d'Urgence (SAMU) centre 15 (French 911) calls concern elderly patients above 75 years of age. For these patients, the clinical pathway should be decided on the basis of the symptomatology described during the call, but also with the gathering of specific data such as medical social and psychological evaluation. These items allow the regulating doctor to assess comorbidity, on-going treatment, psycho-cognitive status, previous hospitalisations, social situation, and patient expectations and needs. However, data collected in order to assess the situation on the phone and take the orientation decision are mainly limited to the severity of clinical symptoms. Medical, psychological and social aspects are rarely gathered, for several reasons : - Phone call shortness : emergency calls should be treated quickly - Regulating doctors are not trained to take in account the specificities or geriatric patients in their decision making. Besides, they are not informed about alternatives to the hospital emergency department, such as "geriatric channel" system. An observational study was performed in 2012 on 692 calls about elderly patients referred to the SAMU centre 15 during 7 days : 63% of these patients were transferred to an emergency department. Regardless of severe cases "hospital regulation", 55% of the least serious cases ("liberal regulation") were transferred to an emergency department. Regulation is inadequate to elderly patients for whom 1) the situation assessment and the appropriate decision making require specific items that are not known by regulating doctors, 2) the medical care and the clinical pathway could be improved by the knowledge of on-field "geriatric channel", 3) the emergency department care is particularly long, 4) and could be pernicious to younger patients. 1920 patients will be recruited between January 2016 and August 2017, including a 6 months wash-out in order to train regulating doctors. This training will include geriatric patient's specificities, and geriatric channels. A 12% difference between the 2 groups (before and after the training) is expected, considering a 80% statistical power. The design is a time series experiment.

NCT ID: NCT02707718 Completed - Sepsis Clinical Trials

Biomarkers for the Early Identification of Sepsis in the Emergency Department

BIPS
Start date: March 1, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Monocentric prospective study on consecutive patients attending the emergency department and suspected to have sepsis. Blood sampling for the measurement of a panel of biomarkers of interest in sepsis.

NCT ID: NCT02703701 Completed - Clinical trials for Patient Satisfaction With Emergency Department Efficiency

Role of Provider-at-Triage on ED Efficiency and Quality of Care

MD at Triage
Start date: October 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The United States spends over $8,000 per capita annually on health care and its health care system is more expensive than other developed countries. Even with high per capita costs and a high proportion of physician specialists, the US lags in health care performance from patients' perspectives. The hospital emergency department (ED) is often the portal of entry for patients seeking health care services and is therefore an ideal setting for initiatives to improve efficiency of care delivery and patient satisfaction. Reduction in wait times, enhanced information delivery and ED staff service quality all have a positive influence on patient perception of health care quality and satisfaction. Prior studies have attempted to increase patient satisfaction by improving staff communication and courtesy, implementing a patient satisfaction team in triage, and delivering information to patients in a timely manner. Another strategy to increase the efficiency of ED operations is adding a physician to triage to perform brief medical screenings and initiate necessary patient testing and treatment. This contrasts to usual practice in which physicians evaluate patients only following registration and nurse assessment of illness or injury severity.

NCT ID: NCT02703389 Completed - Otitis Media Clinical Trials

Improving Knowledge Translation Upon Emergency Department Discharge

Start date: January 2017
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The amount and speed of emergency department (ED) discharge instructions often make it difficult for patients/caregivers to know the final diagnosis and to remember instructions. We hypothesize that a video on ear infections and antibiotics' role in their management will facilitate caregiver understanding and will increase the likelihood of caregivers properly following discharge instructions. To verify this hypothesis, a large multi-centre clinical trial is needed. Prior to this, it is only ethical to conduct a smaller 'pilot' trial. Previously healthy children (6 months-5 years) diagnosed with mild ear infections at the McMaster Children's Hospital ED will be eligible to participate. If the child and caregiver decide to participate, before discharge, the caregiver will either: 1)watch the aforementioned video, 2)be given a pamphlet with the same information, or 3)standard of care (no additional information). Participants will fill a knowledge survey before discharge. The research assistant will contact all participants by phone to determine if the caregiver followed the discharge instructions.

NCT ID: NCT02697071 Completed - Headache Clinical Trials

Ketamine for Acute Migraine in the Emergency Department

Start date: February 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This research study will be a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Because ketamine has yet to be directly studied as treatment for acute migraine headache in the emergency department, the research team is initially interested if ketamine can reduce pain scores in headache patients and reduce the incidence of recurrence while exhibiting an adequate safety profile. By using a placebo-controlled study design, the research team can adequately investigate the effectiveness of the medication in a subgroup previously not well studied.

NCT ID: NCT02694887 Completed - Clinical trials for Triage Category 3 (Urgent)

Capillary and Venous Lactate in Emergency Department Patients

Start date: March 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The objective of the present project is to study the accuracy of capillary blood level measured by handheld lactate analyzers when compared with the reference methods e.g.venepuncture blood gas analyzer sample.