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Wearable Electronic Devices clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06363656 Recruiting - Insomnia Clinical Trials

Assessment of Smartwatch SAMSUNG to Monitor Sleep Quality: an Observational Prospective Study - SleepEx2 Protocol

SLEEP-EX2
Start date: February 15, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this study is to learn if a smartwatch is effective to identify factors related to sleep quality and habits of adults (30 years old or more), enabling the improvement and/or creation of instruments to assess overall health status and sleep quality. The main question it aims to answer is: - Does the smartwatch application (software) indicate sleep habits and measure sleep quality in accordance to the standardized clinical instruments commonly used to assess sleep?

NCT ID: NCT05418881 Recruiting - Surgery Clinical Trials

Evaluation and Implementation of Mobile Tracking Devices to Increase Safety in Hospitalized Patients (MONITOR)

MONITOR
Start date: November 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study investigates the technical feasibility of using mobile health trackers for monitoring of hospitalized patients. Therefore the measurement accuracy of several vital parameters in postoperative hospitalized patients will be compared to clinical gold standard. Factors that could have an influence on the measurement accuracy of the mobile sensors will be investigated.Furthermore patient compliance in continous use of mobile health trackers and technical feasibility of needed data flow will be analyzed. In addition, patients' activity levels are recorded and correlated with various clinical parameters.

NCT ID: NCT04121702 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Acute Coronary Syndrome

Outpatient Cardiac Tele-Rehabilitation in a Public Sports Center

Start date: May 8, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to establish an innovative Cardiac Tele-Rehabilitation (CTR) model. It could expands assistance resources through coordination with public administrations, developing a physical exercise program (PEP) assistance model in phase II that resolves the current situation of lack of adherence in the PEP due in part to the long waiting time to start it. To sum up this study could improve adherence in Cardiac Rehabilitation Phase III. It represents an opportunity to validate an innovative model for the realization of the PEP for phase II that could be expanded to other centres.