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Injuries clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04642131 Recruiting - Fatigue Clinical Trials

Effect of Caffeine Supplementation and Personalized Insoles on Females

Start date: December 9, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Several studies have shown the positive effect that caffeine has on athletic performance related variables. Nonetheless, most studies have been developed in males and have not studied the possible effects on biomechanics and related injuries. Moreover, the inclusion of personalized insoles could also affect biomechanical patterns and thus injury incidence that has shown to be higher when athletes are fatigued. Therefore, the aim of the present randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the effect of fatigue, caffeine supplementation and personalized insoles on biomechanics and athletic performance in female adult soccer players.

NCT ID: NCT03517475 Recruiting - Injuries Clinical Trials

Tailoring a Home Supervision Intervention for Low-Income Families

Start date: October 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators will pilot test (N=100 caregivers of children ages 3-4 years) the effects of a caregiver supervision intervention on caregivers' supervision and children's injury frequency using a Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) design. The control group will receive Services as Usual (SAU), and the treatment group will receive SAU+ SHS. The results will be used to support an R01 application to conduct a larger-scale RCT test of the program.

NCT ID: NCT03225586 Recruiting - Cancer Clinical Trials

Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology Study

PURE
Start date: January 1, 2002
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To examine the impact of health determinants at the individual (e.g. health related behaviors) and societal level (e.g. environmental factors, health related policy, quality of health systems) on health outcomes (e.g. death, non-communicable disease development) across a range of socioeconomic and health resource settings. Additional components of this study will examine genetic factors for non-communicable diseases. This will be examined both through a cross sectional component, and prospectively (cohort component).