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Health Care Workers clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04740125 Completed - HEALTH CARE WORKERS Clinical Trials

SURVEY ABOUT STRESS-COVID IN HEALTH CARE WORKERS IN NORTH AFRICA COUNTRY

COVID-STRESS
Start date: May 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aimed to investigate the psychological impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on healthcare workers (HCWs) and to identify ways of coping with this unprecedented stressful situation.

NCT ID: NCT02401607 Recruiting - Health Care Workers Clinical Trials

SEEK Study - Study on Emergency Health Care Workers' Job Strain Evaluated by Karasek Questionnaire

SEEK
Start date: January 1, 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Emergency health care workers are exposed to job strain - defined by Karasek as a combination of high job demands and low job control. Emergency health care work is a complex interaction between stress due to life-threatening emergencies, overcrowding of the Emergency Department, the lack of sleep, bad food repartition during shifts, and accumulated fatigue. However, the Karasek questionnaire has never been assessed for Emergency Health Care workers. Furthermore, the variation of results during the career has never been assessed. The same measures will be repeated every 5 year to assess long term changes in subjective and objective measures of stress. The study's main objective is the creation of an Emergency Health Care worker's cohort to assess the evolution of the Karasek questionnaire during the follow-up. Secondary objectives are - the evaluation of the food intake before, during and after a nightshift. - the evaluation of other questionnaires

NCT ID: NCT01933087 Completed - Health Care Workers Clinical Trials

Hand Hygiene Intervention Study

HAND
Start date: December 24, 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Infections acquired by patients in hospitals are a major cause of illness and death worldwide, and particularly so in hospitals with very limited resources. Simple hygiene measures, including improved hand hygiene (particularly with increased use of alcohol-based hand rub) by healthcare workers (HCWs) in physical contact with patients, are thought to be amongst the most effective ways of reducing such infections. However, in most hospitals hand hygiene is practiced poorly and improving hand hygiene behavior amongst hospital staff has been found to be difficult. This study aims to evaluate the impact of a multimodal intervention to improve hand hygiene amongst health care workers in accordance with the WHO Guidelines on Hand Hygiene in Health Care. The research design is a prospective stepped wedged trial using all in-patient wards in a 1,000 bed hospital located in Northeast Thailand (Sappasitthiprasong hospital, Ubon Ratchatani). A stepped wedge design is a type of cluster randomized controlled trial which is appropriate when there are prior reasons to believe the intervention will be beneficial (as opposed to equipoise) and when it is impractical to deliver the intervention to all study units simultaneously. Both conditions hold here. The intervention will include educational visits to healthcare workers, improved reminders in the workplace, audit and feedback and social marketing with the aim of inducing behavioural and cultural change in relation to hand hygiene. The intervention will be delivered by the infection control team and the infection control ward nurses (ICWNs) who will receive additional training. The primary outcome will be directly observed hand hygiene compliance. Secondary outcomes will include incidence density of hospital-associated bloodstream and urinary tract infections with specified multiply antibiotic resistant bacteria, incidence density of hospital-associated bloodstream and urinary tract infections with non-multiply antibiotic resistant bacteria, total patient mortality rates, and ward-based consumption of alcohol hand rub and soap (a proxy for hand hygiene compliance). Results from this study will be immediately generalisable to other resource-constrained hospitals in Thailand. The research will also have much wider international significance as there have been very few methodologically sound evaluations of the impact of hand hygiene interventions in hospitals. Moreover, the findings will provide essential information for subsequent work on economic evaluations of infection control interventions to determine under what circumstances such interventions are likely to be cost-effective.