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Geriatric Disease clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Geriatric Disease.

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NCT ID: NCT04710615 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Drug-drug Interactions

Impact of an Artificial Intelligence Platform on Inappropriate Medication Use in Older Adults

PING
Start date: October 5, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Polypharmacy in the older adults is common and promotes the risk of drug interactions. The hypothesis evoked is that a virtual platform with artificial intelligence applied to the health, and in particular to the good use of the drug, could bring aids to the doctors them of the prescription of drugs. The main objective of this study is to evaluate the impact of geriatric use of the Synapse platform on the frequency of inappropriate medication prescriptions (STOPP criteria) in discharge orders for patients 65 years of age or older hospitalized in geriatric department.

NCT ID: NCT04555330 Completed - Cardiac Disease Clinical Trials

Technology Assisted Physical Activity Among Hospitalised Medical Patients

TAPAS-2
Start date: June 11, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Research show that inactivity during hospitalization is the norm and that the negative effects on muscle mass and the fitness of the patient will take a long time and hard work to recover afterwards. Especially for weaker elderly patients, just a few days in bed could mean that they are not able to take care of themselves afterwards, with increased care expenses and increased risk of relapse as a consequence. Even though this is known, the work to motivate patients to be active during their hospitalization is limited to few training sessions with only the most vulnerable patients. No tools are today available for objectively tracking and motivating patients to be active during their stay. Having such a professional tool would not only motivate but also shift the attention of the health professionals towards the importance of physical activity in the treatment of the patient. The aim of the studys is to investigate if patients hospitalised for medical disease will increase their time spent out of bed during hospitalisation through simple visual feedback about physical activities from a mobile bedside device.