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Inpatients clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03323190 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

An Educational Intervention to Improve Disease Management Knowledge of Hospitalized Patients With COPD

Start date: August 30, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this study is to determine if inpatient COPD education would result in improved patient knowledge of COPD.

NCT ID: NCT02136186 Completed - Inpatients Clinical Trials

Home Telemonitoring in Patients at High Risk for Readmission

Start date: October 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the efficacy of home telemonitoring as an intervention to decrease hospital readmissions in patients at high risk for readmission. The overall readmission rate for high-risk MCF hospital patients is approximately 20%. Currently a system is in place to identify and score all MCF patients for their risk of readmission. This score is based on multiple variables including but not limited to: co-morbid conditions, patient's health literacy, whether they are a Medicare/Medicaid patient, their in-home social support, and whether they have had prior hospital admissions within the previous year. The literature shows that home telemonitoring of patients has had mixed results for effectiveness at preventing hospitalizations and emergency department visits. Many of these reports have restricted studies to patients with specific diseases or general characteristics; some have shown improved results while others have not. No study has examined patients who are high risk for readmission to determine if home telemonitoring for 30 days post-discharge reduces the risk for 30-day readmission.

NCT ID: NCT01931553 Completed - Hospitalization Clinical Trials

A Pragmatic Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial to Standardize Attending Morning Rounds in Medicine

Start date: September 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Attending morning rounds take place at teaching hospitals every day. They are the primary mechanism for patient care delivery, supervision and education of trainees, and communication with patients, families, and staff. However, they are done with little standardization or widely recognized best practices. The objective of this quality improvement (QI) initiative is to evaluate the adherence to and impact of implementing standardized attending morning rounds on medicine teams at our institution. A standardized rounding intervention has been developed which includes specific guidance on completing the following activities during morning rounds: (1) Pre-rounds discretion; (2) Pre-rounds huddle; (3) Bedside registered nurse (RN) integration; (4) Patient-centered rounding; (5) Real-time order writing. This trial will randomize half of the investigators' medicine teams at University of California San Francisco to this rounding intervention whilst the other half will be randomized to continue with usual unstandardized rounding practices. The investigators will compare medicine teams randomized to undertake standardized rounding to those teams undertaking usual practice. Outcomes assessed will relate to the patient (e.g. satisfaction), providers (e.g. satisfaction), efficiency (e.g. total morning round time) as well as adherence to the intervention . The investigators' study hypotheses are that patient satisfaction scores will be higher for those patients receiving standardized bedside rounds compared to the usual care group. The investigators also hypothesize that total attending morning rounds time and interns length of workday will be shorter and that the number of consultations ordered before noon will increase for those teams undertaking standardized bedside. Further, the investigator hypothesize higher levels of nurse participation, physician and medical student satisfaction with standardized bedside rounding.

NCT ID: NCT01397682 Enrolling by invitation - Aging Clinical Trials

Epidemiological Observatory on the Health Conditions of Inpatients Aged 65 or Older at the INRCA Research Hospitals

report-AGE
Start date: May 5, 2011
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this research study is to collect clinical data, comprehensive geriatric assessment, risk factors, biological data and blood samples from inpatients aged 65 and older at the INRCA research hospitals (Italy). All data will be stored in a research bank and used to better clarify the mechanisms underlying the condition of "frailty" in aged patients. The database will be created on the INRCA server platform by establishing a safe HTTPS protocol.