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Error Disclosure clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06366607 Completed - Nurse's Role Clinical Trials

Managing High-alert Medication Administration and Errors

Start date: March 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

High-alert medications are drugs that may lead to serious harm when they are wrongly administered to patients. Safe medication administration is the crucial role of nursing staff.

NCT ID: NCT06234085 Completed - Error Disclosure Clinical Trials

Optimizing Video Communication Assessment for Teaching Error Disclosure Skills

Start date: July 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this randomized, single-blinded, educational study is to test the effect of providing crowdsourced ratings and feedback to second-year (PGY2) internal medicine (IM) and family medicine (FM) resident physicians' about their adverse event communication skills. The main question it aims to answer is: - Is the intervention of providing reports with personal performance feedback and recommendations for effective error disclosure associated with higher ratings of resident error disclosure skills? Participants will perform simulated error disclosure with a software tool called the Video-based Communication Assessment (VCA). Participants will be randomized to receive feedback reports (intervention) or not (control). Participants receiving the intervention will be asked to review their feedback and all participants will use the VCA again approximately 4 weeks later with different patient cases.

NCT ID: NCT04659265 Completed - Diagnoses Disease Clinical Trials

A Priori Diagnosis and Diagnostic Errors

Start date: January 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a prospective randomized single-blind simulator-based trial. 156 4th year medical students were randomised to receive one of three different suspected diagnoses of a pre-treating physician (no diagnosis, myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism) prior to the task to make a focussed assessment and perform first management steps in a patient presenting to the emergency department. The patient (simulator) suffered from an acute myocardial infarction. Video recordings were obtained during simulation and used for data analysis. Primary endpoint was the participants' final presuptive diagnosis.