View clinical trials related to Injuries.
Filter by:There is a lack of knowledge about the extent of bicycle injuries in Norway. Among other things, a significant underreporting of bicycle injuries has been found in the official road traffic accident statistics based on police-registered accidents. Furthermore, there is a lack of knowledge about the long-term consequences of serious bicycle injuries. The main purpose of this project is to generate new knowledge about the consequences of bicycle injuries for later disability, employment status and use of prescribed drugs. In addition, the investigators want to study whether such long-term consequences vary according to demographic and socioeconomic characteristics, as well as to assess the degree of overlap between bicycle injuries registered in the official road traffic accident statistics and bicycle injuries registered in the health service, including an assessment of the severity of the injury. The investigators will use a retrospective analysis where a population-based dataset from the National Population Register is linked with information on injured cyclists from Statistics Norway's database on police-reported road traffic accidents, the Norwegian Patient Register, the National Trauma Registry and the Norwegian Cause of Death Registry. In order to study the long-term consequences of bicycle injuries, the investigators will also compile information on social security benefits and employment from Statistics Norway's historical events database (FD-Trygd) and the use of prescribed drugs from the Norwegian Prescribed Drug Registry. The investigators will also collect information on income and educational attainment from registers in Statistics Norway. The project will contribute to increased knowledge about the societal and individual burden of bicycle injuries, knowledge that is crucial for prioritizing and implementing necessary preventive measures.
This study will test the effectiveness of different types of driver training interventions for reducing young new driver crash risk early after licensure.
This qualitative, cross-sectional study aims at describing the experience of Italian dancers with injury. Dancers face a high risk of sustaining one or more injuries during their career (87-94%), which may lead to physical, psychological, and socioeconomic consequences affecting dancer's lives and careers both short and long-term. Dancers report fearing injury and its consequences and believing in the existence of a stigma around injury and injured colleagues; many of them also try to self-manage pain and delay reporting injuries to healthcare professionals, possibly making its outcomes worse. This study will collect data from dancers via focus groups and individual interviews, investigating dancers' experiences, thoughts, and beliefs about injury. Records from the interviews will be transcribed ad verbatim and analyzed using the framework method to synthetize the data and highlight the most meaningful content. Understanding dancers' thoughts and behaviors regarding past or possible future injuries may be beneficial in improving treatment efficacy and designing adequate education and prevention strategies. It may also help raise awareness of dancers' complex and unique needs, and the importance of having accessible, specialized professionals around dance companies and schools.
The safety integration stakeholders (saints) program to integrate worker and patient safety in Oregon rural hospitals. The rationale is that the saints program will positively impact outcomes by identifying and training peer leaders on strategies to optimize environmental, administrative, and educational components to become a saint and regularly collaborate with safety stakeholders/administrative leaders at each site through continuous improvement cycles (e.g. plan-do-study-act).
Interventional, non-pharmacological crossover study aimed at identify statistically significant differences in postural stability and spatio-temporal gait cycle parameters in patients with lower limb amputation by means of taskoriented rehabilitation training and multisensory feedback generated by an immersive RV environment, aiming at the enhancement of use-dependent brain plasticity. These changes will be compared between the two groups examined, respectively experimental (Caren virtual training phase plus conventional physiotherapy phase) and control (conventional physiotherapy phase plus Caren virtual training phase).
A prospective cohort study with 9 months follow up was carried out in 2017-2018. Boxers of both sexes 18 years and older from all 7 boxing clubs in Iceland were invited to participate in the study. Participants filled out a questionnaire on previous injuries during boxing training and competition and were evaluated on the Sport Concussion Assessment Tool 3rd edition (SCAT3). Exposure at training and competition was measured and any injuries sustained during the study period were recorded via text messages and phone calls every 2 weeks.
Soccer stands as one of the most widespread sports that ensures active participation . It has continued to grow and develop since its inception in all societies
The goal of this Hybrid Type 2 effectiveness-implementation trial is to test the Standardized Checklist for Optimizing Procedural Ergonomics in Endoscopy (SCOPE-E) bundle-a multicomponent intervention comprised of a pre-procedure ergonomic timeout checklist and evidence-based implementation strategies-as a strategy to mitigate the risk of Endoscopy-related injuries (ERI) during colonoscopy.
Chronic pain is associated with injuries and disabilities. This prospective observational study explores the injury or disability claims made by chronic pain patients. It evaluates the socio-demographics of the patient population. It explores the impact of pain clinic services on the patients' injury rehabilitation, insurance claim outcome, and socioeconomic situation.
A 'digital-first' approach is currently under implementation in several Swedish regions. The principles behind implementing an online service as an access way to primary care are based on an expectation that it can make access easier, direct people to appropriate levels of care, and increase both availability of heath care and cost efficiency. However, a recent Swedish report concluded that digital triage in primary care has not been investigated in a clinical real-world setting, including real patients, meaning that the benefits and risks for patients as well as on a system level remain unclear. The aim of this trial is to study the feasibility of a larger trial that will compare digital triage and traditional telephone triage on adherence to triaged health care level, in a randomized controlled study (feasibility study, RCT). The study will recruit a total of 120 patients, of which half will be randomized to telephone triage and half to digital triage.