View clinical trials related to Safety Issues.
Filter by:This study aims to assess the usability of a load leg design for caregivers who must install the child safety seat into a vehicle. The specific aims are to quantify any errors committed by the participants while installing the car seat and to assess participants' opinions on the car seat's load leg design.
Indications-based prescribing is a medication ordering system in which a clinician selects an indication, and then the electronic health record (EHR) suggests an appropriate medication regimen. This approach was shown to significantly decrease medication ordering errors in a prototype environment. However, the effect of indications-based prescribing on preventing ordering errors has not been rigorously evaluated in a real-world healthcare setting. Antibiotics are the medication class most likely to contain ordering errors, which can lead to significant patient harm. At NewYork-Presbyterian (NYP) a robust antimicrobial indication-based order set was developed to help clinicians identify the appropriate antibiotic, dose, frequency, and duration, based on type of infection and patient-specific characteristics, but it is not widely used. The investigators propose a randomized controlled trial to assess the effectiveness of this indications-based order set for reducing antimicrobial ordering errors.
The goal of this interventional study is to evaluate the implementation and effectiveness of a comprehensive a universal firearm injury prevention program, ACTFAST (Adopting Comprehensive Training for FireArm Safety in Trauma centers), in level 1 trauma centers. The main aims of the study are: 1. (Primary Aim 1) Increase the adoption, implementation, and maintenance of a universal firearm injury prevention intervention at three participating trauma centers in the mid-Atlantic states; 2. (Primary Aim 2) Assess firearm injury prevention knowledge, attitudes, and safe storage practices among trauma patients treated within participating trauma centers.
Limited literature has focused on the use of totally tubeless mini-percutaneous nephrolithotomy (Mini-PCNL) for the treatment of large renal stones. This Randomized Controlled trial aims to compare complication and safety of Mini-PCNL between total tubeless and tubeless Mini-PCNL.
This study will explore the safety, pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD) of KP405 as a potential new treatment for Parkinson's disease.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility and performance of the Percutaneous Ultrasound Jejunostomy (PUJ) procedure that utilizes a novel device (PUMA-J System) in conjunction with widely available ultrasound technology and endoscopic guidance. The procedure will be performed in up to 10 eligible subjects. Patients will be followed for 2 days following performance of PUJ to assess for potential complications.
The object of this study was to evaluate safety of cream containing sericin and turmeric in healthy volunteers.
The goal of this four-part preclinical [I-II] and clinical [III-IV] trial is to compare, with randomised crossover study design [I-IV], a new medical airway device with standard procedure (biteblock or no device) for upper airway patency during sedation with intravenous propofol [I-IV]. - Page 1 of 9 [DRAFT] - The two main questions it aims to answer are if this new airway device is superior to standard procedure with respect to - maintenance of spontaneous ventilation [I] and upper airway volumes [II] at moderate and deep steady-state levels of sedation in healthy volunteer study participants, and - fewer and less lasting bedside signs of respiratory depression [III-IV], and less adjuvant use of manual airway support [III-IV] during procedural sedation (PS) according to standard of care(SOC) in study patients scheduled for colonoscopy or ureteral catheterisation under PS. Owing to the crossover study design used throughout the trial, there are no comparison groups of study participants [I-II] or study patients [III-IV].
The European Food Safety Authority has approved many applications for UVB light treated foods (e.g. UVB-exposed button mushrooms) in the last years. The UVB light treatment is used to increase the vitamin D content in foods and improve the vitamin D status of subjects. However, UVB irradiation is accompanied by the formation of vitamin D photoisomers such as lumisterol and tachysterol. The current study aims to investigated whether these vitamin D photoisomers can enter the circulation and are metabolised in humans that consume UVB-treated mushrooms.
The treatment plan for patients requiring mechanical ventilator support is to provide the minimal amount of analgesics and sedatives necessary for the patient to tolerate the ventilator as lower amounts of these drugs has been shown to improve patient outcomes. Patients in this critical state experience confusion, restlessness, and agitation, which sometimes leads to an unplanned removal of a patient's line or medical device. The current standard of care for limiting the movement of mechanically ventilated patients' in the critical care units in hospitals is the use of physical wrist restraints. Researchers demonstrated that wrist restraints are ineffective in preventing the removal of invasive and adjunct devices and have many negative physical, psychological, physiological, and emotional consequences for the patient and their family. In this proposed research, we will use the innovative medical device called the HEALiX, a newly developed device worn on the arms of mechanically ventilated patients that allows freedom of movement and protects from removing adjunct mechanical ventilation devices and invasive monitoring equipment. This randomized controlled trial will investigate the HEALiX device's effectiveness in preventing the removal of invasive monitoring devices (such as endotracheal tubes, central lines, feeding tubes, etc.) compared with the current standard of care, wrist restraints.