Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03117179
Other study ID # PI2013_843_0012
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date November 26, 2013
Est. completion date August 25, 2019

Study information

Verified date May 2023
Source Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Amiens
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Each year more than 15 million French people visit the emergency services and almost 80% of them come out without hospitalization after having undergone a clinical examination and possibly additional examinations.


Description:

Each year more than 15 million French people visit the emergency services and almost 80% of them come out without hospitalization after having undergone a clinical examination and possibly additional examinations. Following their discharge, compliance with discharge requirements and recommendations (treatment, monitoring, follow-up, etc.) is a determining factor in improving their health. Non-membership is linked to an increase in morbidity, mortality and use of the health system. Patient adherence to discharge instructions is conditional on patient understanding. Unfortunately, the environment of an emergency service often creates conditions for information and education of the patient that are often far from optimal or at least that are specific to a typical consultation. Data from the international literature showed that 78% of people who come out of emergency after consultation do not clearly understand the instructions and only 20% are aware of their lack of understanding. Waisman et al. Documented that 25% of patients did not understand their diagnosis and that 13% to 18% did not understand treatment instructions. Heng et al. Have shown that patients leaving after head trauma are unable to cite the symptoms that should prompt them to consult quickly. The involvement of healthcare teams to inform patients with the help of different communication media is therefore particularly important in trying to improve understanding and adherence to exit instructions. However, Zavala et al. Point to the fact that this is not necessarily sufficient. Some authors have identified factors of poor adherence: multiple chronic diseases, multiple drug treatments, psychiatric disorders, but also age, social isolation, depression, quality of life and socio-economic and cultural level , A low level of health literacy, or planned medical follow-up, the severity of the pathology and the perception of that severity by the patient, or the patient's dissatisfaction with medical instructions. The patients' adherence to the literature is evaluated in a varied manner according to the pathologies concerned: counting the number of tablets; Patient self-tracking log; Reports from physicians, reports by third parties (such as the patient's spouse); Electronic measurements (for example, metered-dose inhalers or electronic drop dispensers); Blood or urine dosage. The different methods used have advantages and disadvantages that need to be assessed according to the needs of the study we wish to implement. While declarative investigations in the assessment of patient adherence are criticized, no method has unfortunately been used as a benchmark for assessing adherence. The bibliographic search did not find any questionnaires that had been validated in this context. In order to evaluate the adhesion, the investigator will therefore opt for a semi-directed interview at D7 in order to better control a possible bias of memorization. This tool has known limitations including a tendency to overestimate adhesion, because patients tend to respond to what doctors want to hear. This will be taken into account in the interpretation of the results.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 242
Est. completion date August 25, 2019
Est. primary completion date August 1, 2019
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Major patient not benefiting from any legal protection measures. - Speaking French. - Outgoing after having received a consultation in a hospital emergency department. - Accepting to participate in the study after being informed of the protocol. - Having the possibility to be reached by telephone on J7. Exclusion Criteria: - Patient with a pathology that does not allow him or her to understand instructions or express themselves. - Patient under tutelage or curatorship or deprived of all freedom.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Discharge from patient after consultation in emergency department
Discharge from patient after consultation in emergency department

Locations

Country Name City State
France CHU Amiens Picardie Amiens Picardie

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Amiens

Country where clinical trial is conducted

France, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Analysis of patient compliance with discharge Analysis of patient compliance with discharge orders issued after consultation in emergencies determined by telephone interview 7 days
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT01984645 - Primary-care-provider Identification And Notification N/A
Completed NCT02610205 - Caring Touch as a Bodily Anchor for Patients After Sustaining a Motor Vehicle Accident N/A
Completed NCT02901197 - Capnography At the Bedside: Leading Educational Efforts N/A
Completed NCT02297113 - Rapid Sequence Intubation at the Emergency Department N/A
Completed NCT02377687 - Is Life Worth Living After Major Emergency GI Surgery? Patient Reported Outcome in Elderly Emergency Surgery Patients N/A
Completed NCT02738164 - SEPSIS 3 Critera for Risk Stratification in Emergency Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT03881839 - Internet Tools and Emergency Attendance
Not yet recruiting NCT06448299 - Erector Spinae Plane Block Versus Oblique-Subcostal Transversus Abdominis Plane Block in Emergency Abdominal Surgery With Midline Incision N/A
Completed NCT02617875 - Telemedical Support for Prehospital Emergency Medical Service N/A
Completed NCT02854020 - Comparison of Inflight First Aid Performed by Cabin Crew Members and Medical Volunteers N/A
Completed NCT02825082 - Emergency Surgery in the Elderly: Comparison of Frailty Index and Surgical Risk Score
Completed NCT02721927 - The Use of Emergency Department by Syrian Refugees and the Increasing Cost of Health Care N/A
Completed NCT02040896 - Who Contributes to the Ordering of CT Scans in Emergency Department Patients?
Completed NCT01281501 - Symptomatic Relief of Acute Dyspeptic Pain in Emergency Department With Pantoprazole Phase 4
Completed NCT01321593 - Hemoglobin Measured by "Orsense NBM-200MP" Device and Laboratory Measurement N/A
Terminated NCT01653977 - Impact of Early Goal-directed Fluid Therapy in Hypovolemic Patients Undergoing Emergency Surgery N/A
Completed NCT02720315 - Intensive Cryotherapy in the Emergency Department for Acute Musculoskeletal Injuries N/A
Completed NCT02880826 - Measurement of Care Safety Culture in French ICU, Correlation With the Characteristics of Morbi-mortality Reviews N/A
Completed NCT02881710 - Variation IGFBP7 Markers and TIMP2 Induced by Injection of Contrast Iodized Drug at the Intensive Care Patient
Completed NCT02770638 - Tissue Interface Pressures in Athlete Medical Extraction N/A