View clinical trials related to Severe Anemia.
Filter by:The goal of this observational study is to learn about the costs that occur when participants with severe anemia are treated with blood transfusions or with patient blood management (PBM). PBM means that the body of the participant is stimulated to produce new blood by itself rather than receiving it from a blood donor, and to reduce blood losses. The main question the study aims to answer is: Do participants treated with transfusions incur the same treatment costs than participants treated with PBM? And how much costs are this in relation to the lives saved by the therapy of severe anemia?
The goal of this observational cohort study is to compare patients with very low red blood counts who receive different therapy. Its main question[s] it aims to answer are: - Which group of patients dies more frequent: Patients who receive patient blood management only, patients who receive patient blood management and transfusions or patients who receive only transfusions? - Among these groups: which group of patients has more complications during hospital stay? Patients will either receive patient blood management, which is the management of anemia, bleeding and coagulation problems, will receive transfusions, that is, blood from other people, or a mix of both.
Background and rationale: Children hospitalised with severe anaemia in Africa are at high risk of readmission or death within 6 months after discharge. No strategy specifically addresses this post-discharge period. In Malawi, 3 months of post-discharge malaria chemoprevention (PMC) with monthly 3-day treatment courses of artemether-lumefantrine (AL) in children with severe malarial anaemia prevented 31% of deaths and readmissions. The effect was in addition to the effect of insecticide-treated bednets. There is now need to design and evaluate effective delivery mechanism for PMC within the health system.
This study evaluates the efficacy and safety of 3 months of malaria chemoprevention post-discharge using dihydroartemisinin piperaquine (DHA-P) in children under 5 years of age admitted with severe anemia. One half will receive monthly DHA-P and the other half placebo.
This study was designed to compile the reasons and specific indications for the prescription of Cyproterone Acetate combined with Ethinyl Estradiol by Health Care Providers. The primary objective of the study was to characterize the prescribing behaviors for Cyproterone Acetate combined with Ethinyl Estradiol in 5 European countries (Austria, Czech Republic, France, the Netherlands, and Spain), including: - prescription indications for Cyproterone Acetate combined with Ethinyl Estradiol - use of Cyproterone Acetate combined with Ethinyl Estradiol in accordance with the updated label - concomitant use of Cyproterone Acetate combined with Ethinyl Estradiol and combined hormonal contraceptives - second line treatment with Cyproterone Acetate combined with Ethinyl Estradiol for the indication acne
The purpose of the Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Registry (HBOTR) is to provide real world patient outcome and side effect information from electronic health records submitted to a specialty specific hyperbaric registry as part of "Stage 2 of Meaningful Use," including data provided to meet PQRS requirements via the registry's QCDR mission. Goals include understanding the value of HBOT among patients treated for a variety of conditions in relation to the frequency and severity of HBOT side effects. While randomized, controlled trials can establish the efficacy of treatments like HBOT, because they routinely exclude patients with co-morbid conditions common to those patients seen in usual clinical practice, the results of RCTs are usually non-generalizable. Real world data can be used to better understand the effectiveness of HBOT among typical patients, as well as the risks associated with treatment.