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Infant Morbidity clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Infant Morbidity.

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NCT ID: NCT06267508 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Infant, Newborn, Diseases

Increasing Neonatal HIV Test and Treat to Maximize the Long-Term Impact on Infant Health and Novel Infant Antiretroviral Treatment

LIFE2Scale
Start date: March 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims to improve HIV healthcare services for mothers living with HIV and their newborns in Tanzania and Mozambique. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1) does enhancing screening with maternal HIV viral load monitoring at delivery identify more mother-child pairs at high-risk for HIV vertical transmission? and 2) are high-risk infants linked to appropriate prevention and care? The study will expand access to HIV testing services to more rural settings using a hub-and-spoke referral system.

NCT ID: NCT06168019 Recruiting - COVID-19 Clinical Trials

Influenza & COVID-19 Obstetric and Perinatal Epidemiology Study in India

ICOPE
Start date: December 26, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study will be conducted as a prospective cohort study, enrolling all eligible women in their first trimester of pregnancy during a baseline visit during week 6-13 of pregnancy at Government Medical College Hospital, Nagpur. The Hospital provides primary, secondary, and tertiary care and the obstetric department delivers about 10,000 babies a year. The hypothesis is that co-infection of other respiratory viruses (ORV), particularly COVID-19 and Influenza increases the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes in mothers and babies and could address the current standard of care in India to not vaccinate pregnant women during pregnancy, by either encouraging vaccination against both viruses before planning a pregnancy or during pregnancy based on global data supporting the safety of this strategy.

NCT ID: NCT05282485 Recruiting - HIV Clinical Trials

Mitigating Infectious Morbidity and Growth Deficits in HIV Exposed Uninfected infanTs With Human Milk Oligosaccharides

MIGH-T MO
Start date: June 2, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Primary Objective: - To evaluate the effects of synbiotics on infectious morbidity and growth while it is in place from 4 to 24 weeks of age. - To evaluate the effects of synbiotics on infectious morbidity and growth from 4 to 48 weeks of age. Secondary Objectives: - To evaluate the effects of synbiotics on growth from 4 to 72 weeks of age. - To evaluate the effects of synbiotics on infant neurodevelopment at 48 and 72 weeks of age. - To evaluate the effects of synbiotics on biological measurements while it is in place from 4 to 24 weeks of age. - To evaluate the effects of synbiotics on biological measurements from 4 to 48 weeks of age. - To evaluate the effects of synbiotics on gut microbiome and fecal short chain fatty acids from 4 to 72 weeks of age. - To investigate feasibility, acceptance, tolerability, and behavioral adherence with the intervention. - To investigate whether the synbiotics reduces infectious morbidity and improves growth in CHEU relative to CHUU. - To investigate whether infant gut microbiota composition, maturity and function, and markers of inflammation and HMOs at baseline and over time are associated with morbidity and poor growth in CHEU and CHUU.

NCT ID: NCT04372667 Completed - HIV/AIDS Clinical Trials

Adaptation and Evaluation of the PMTCT CSC in Dedza and Ntcheu Districts, Malawi

Start date: June 7, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This CDC-funded study sought to evaluate the effect of an adapted Community Score Card Approach on maternal retention in ART, maternal retention across the PMTCT service cascade, and the uptake of early infant diagnosis services in Malawi. The study also estimated the cost of the implementation of the Community Score Card Approach.

NCT ID: NCT04287959 Recruiting - Respiratory Disease Clinical Trials

SWISH Trial (Strategies for Weaning Infants on Supportive High Flow)

SWISH
Start date: October 6, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Bronchiolitis is a common type of chest infection that tends to affect babies and young children under a year old. In older children and adults, the same viruses that cause bronchiolitis lead to the 'common cold'. The symptoms of bronchiolitis are like a common cold and include a blocked or runny nose, a cough and a mildly raised temperature. Bronchiolitis affects the bronchioles which are the smaller breathing tubes in the lungs. They produce more mucus than usual and become swollen, leading to a cough and a runny nose. In more severe cases, the tubes become clogged up with mucus which causes breathing problems. In some babies, the breathing problems may present as breathing fast, with in-drawing of the muscles around the rib cage, and in rare cases, very young babies with bronchiolitis may stop breathing for brief periods ('apnoea'). The illness usually starts with a mild runny nose or cough, gets worse over three to five days or so, and then slowly gets better, usually lasting about 10 to 14 days in total. Around 2 in 100 infants with bronchiolitis will need to spend some time in hospital during the course of their illness. This is usually for one of two reasons: they need oxygen treatment to keep their oxygen saturations within acceptable levels or they cannot manage to feed from the breast or a bottle because of a blocked nose or difficulty breathing. Here at the Children's Hospital for Wales we are using 'High flow' to deliver oxygen. This is a relatively new concept on the general paediatric wards, and more established in a setting such as High Dependency Unit (HDU). However, we have been using it successfully on the wards for the last 3 years. High flow device delivering a mixture of oxygen and air at high flow to help open the child's airways so that their lungs can add oxygen to their blood. It is given through a set of prongs (short plastic tubes) inserted just inside the nostrils. Research has shown that the early use of high flow can reduce the chances of the child needing escalation of care to a high dependency unit or paediatric intensive care unit. The investigators are interested in studying the process of weaning high flow support once the child is over the worst of their illness. This will enable the investigators to use the most effective method of weaning babies from their high flow, and ready for discharge. This has the potential to reduce the number of hours spent in hospital for babies and their parents or guardians.

NCT ID: NCT04206878 Completed - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Evaluating the Feasibility of Point of Care Birth Testing in Eswatini

Start date: June 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims to assess the feasibility and utility of birth testing using point-of-care (POC) testing in maternity settings in Eswatini.

NCT ID: NCT04206241 Completed - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Assessing the Feasibility, Acceptability and Effects Of HIV Birth Testing In Maternity Settings In Zimbabwe

Start date: January 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims to assess the feasibility and, acceptability and effects of implementing HIV testing at birth testing using point-of-care (POC) HIV nucleic acid testing (NAT) in maternity settings.

NCT ID: NCT04049526 Completed - Infant Behavior Clinical Trials

The Effects of Different Music Genres on Heart Rate Variability in Extremely and Very Low Birth Weight Newborns

Start date: February 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

AIM: to investigate the influence of different music genres on Heart Rate Variability (HRV) of preterm infants. Neonates undergo a daily randomized music listening program. An electrocardiogram is performed to evaluate HRV parameters in each neonate with and without music exposure.

NCT ID: NCT03824067 Completed - HIV/AIDS Clinical Trials

Impact of Point-of-Care EID for HIV-Exposed Infants

POC-EID
Start date: August 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This mixed methods study will utilize a randomized step-wedge design to assess the impact of point-of-care (POC) versus conventional early infant diagnosis (EID) on key outcomes including timely return of results to caregivers and time to initiation on treatment for HIV-infected infants. Data will be collected through longitudinal clinical follow-up and medical chart extraction of routine records and lab forms. Feasibility and acceptability data will be collected through interviews with mothers/caregivers of HIV-exposed infants, and community focus groups.

NCT ID: NCT03400878 Completed - Vaccine Reaction Clinical Trials

Comparing Morbidity and Mortality Effects of Two Different Strains of BCG

Start date: October 14, 2017
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Background: Investigators at Bandim Health Project (BHP, www.bandim.org) in Guinea-Bissau have shown in several randomized trials that the Bacille-Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine against tuberculosis (TB) is associated with reduced mortality in the first months of life. BCG is a live attenuated vaccine, which means that it consists of active tuberculosis bacteria that are not capable of infecting a human with TB. BCG has been grown and maintained at many different laboratories all over the world using slightly different laboratory techniques. Due to the accumulation of genetic mutations in the different BCG strains, many variants of the vaccine exists today. These have different properties when it comes to immune response, side effects, protection against TB and scar formation. The BCG scar status after vaccination is a good marker for the non-specific effects of the vaccine; among BCG-vaccinated infants, those with a BCG scar have improved survival. The investigators hypothesize that the different types of BCG vary in terms of the strength of the non-specific effects and thus the impact on overall morbidity and mortality. In the trial, the investigators will compare the two most widely used BCG strains in the world, BCG-Russia and BCG-Japan, with respect to their non-specific effects on morbidity and mortality. As an addition, the investigators will study the effect of maternal BCG vaccination on the subsequent effect of BCG-vaccination in the offspring, since there are indications that the maternal BCG scar status primes for a stronger non-specific response in the offspring.