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Tundra lists 9 Hospital Acquired Condition clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT07281638
Bedside Bike Early Mobilization Program for Inpatients
Hospital immobility leads to serious complications including muscle loss, weakness, delirium, pressure ulcers, and blood clots. Despite being medically stable, hospitalized patients spend over 90% of their time in bed due to staffing shortages, fall risks, and limited physical therapy availability. Within one week of admission, patients can lose approximately 2% of thigh muscle mass per day, and nearly half develop clinically significant hospital-acquired weakness.The Bedside Bike is a portable, low-resistance exercise device that clamps securely to hospital beds, allowing patients to perform leg and arm cycling exercises safely without leaving their bed. This study will evaluate whether hospitalized patients at Indiana University Health facilities can feasibly and safely use the Bedside Bike to maintain mobility during their hospital stay.This quality improvement study will enroll 80 adult inpatients expected to stay at least 3 days. All participants will receive the Bedside Bike in addition to usual care (standard physical therapy and medical treatment). The study will measure how often patients use the device, whether it is safe (tracking any device-related problems), and whether it may help improve outcomes such as hospital length of stay, functional mobility scores, discharge to home, and rates of hospital-acquired weakness. Participants will have functional assessments at admission and discharge, use the Bedside Bike throughout their hospitalization (targeting at least 15 minutes daily), and be followed for 60 days after discharge to track readmissions, falls, living arrangements, and mortality.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 110 Years
Updated: 2026-03-27
NCT06359587
Re-Purposing the Ordering of Routine Laboratory Tests in Hospitals in British Columbia
The goal of this stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial is to assess the impact of a laboratory test overuse intervention bundle on laboratory test utilization in 6 health authorities (16 hospitals) in British Columbia. The main question it aims to answer is if the intervention bundle, inclusive of healthcare provider and patient engagement tools, can be effectively implemented for hospitalized medical inpatients in 16 hospitals across BC and reduce laboratory test over-use. Researchers will compare hospital clusters that receive the intervention at different (sequential) time points to see if there are significant changes in the measured outcomes after the intervention.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-12-05
1 state
NCT05725928
Assisted Ambulation to Improve Health Outcomes for Older Medical Inpatients
The investigator proposes to conduct a randomized trial of supervised ambulation delivered by mobility technician (MT) up to three times daily, including weekends, to hospitalized medical patients. The aims of the study are to compare the short and intermediate-term outcomes of patients randomized to the intervention versus those patients randomized to receive usual care, to identify patients who are most likely to benefit from the intervention and to assess whether the intervention increases or decreases overall costs of an episode of care, including the cost of the MTs, the index hospitalization and the first 30 days post enrollment.
Gender: All
Ages: 65 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-07-30
2 states
NCT06089239
Choosing Wisely: De-implementing Fall Prevention Alarms in Hospitals
This is a Hybrid II de-implementation study to reduce use of fall prevention alarms in hospitals. The intervention consists of tailored, site-specific approaches for three core implementation strategies: education, audit/feedback and opinion leaders. Hospital units will be randomized to low-intensity or high-intensity coaching for the implementation of the tailored strategies.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-07-16
15 states
NCT06326424
Delirium Identification in Older Patients With Alzheimer's and Other Related Dementias In the Emergency Department
Delirium is highly prevalent and very bad for patients with dementia. Delirium is a dangerous medical condition that occurs in 6-38% of older Emergency Department patients and 70% of ICU patients. A person who develops delirium in the ED or hospital has a 12 times higher odds of being newly diagnosed with dementia in the next year compared to a similar patient who does not become delirious. Delirium is especially dangerous for persons living with Alzheimer Disease and Related Dementias (AD/ADRD). Persons living with ADRD have an almost 50% chance of developing delirium in the hospital. Clinicians are bad at recognizing delirium. A recent systematic review led by the Geriatric Emergency Care Applied Research network (NIH funded) found that current delirium screening tools are at most 64% sensitive, meaning that physicians can identify some phenotypes of delirium well, but cannot easily rule out delirium in acutely ill older patients. The investigators propose integrating wrist biosensors into the emergency management of older adults with dementia. The investigators will monitor heart rate variability, movement, and electrodermal activity (electrical activity of at the level of the skin) to determine if an array of biosensors more sensitive to delirium than current verbal screening tools.
Gender: All
Ages: 65 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-04-03
1 state
NCT05973916
Comprehensive Intervention to Improve Environmental Disinfection
A comprehensive intervention to improve the level of cleaning and disinfection of patients' units, in order to reduce new acquisitions and environmental contamination by multidrug resistant organisms: a prospective controlled crossover trial, using VYV led lights and continuous air filtering of patients' rooms, coupled with establishment of a "patient's unit commando" cleaning team.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2024-07-31
NCT06432179
Hospice Volunteer Community,Dying Patient Prepare Spirtal Care
Due to the aging population, the cases of elderly disability and death caused by chronic diseases and cancer are also increasing; thus increasing the demand and trend of community palliative care. Anning volunteers are members of the Anning team and play an integral role in the care of the "whole community". Partners who can provide psychosocial support in fear, grief, informal care, and "individualized care" can focus on patient and family needs and give their time and presence. And make up for the shortage of medical manpower. Assist nurses to take care of patients together, which is an important support for nursing care. In the community, An Ning volunteers are an important help to closely care for patients and support family members to take care of them at home and fulfill their wish of dying at home. In view of the community's peaceful home care, the trend and importance of hospice at home, it is necessary to cooperate with the "volunteers" of the tranquility team. Inquiry Only a few papers mentioned Anning volunteers' service history and research on the meaning of life, but there was a lack of in-depth and systematic discussions on Anning volunteers, including their motivation, training, process, care effectiveness, impact on training volunteer organization management, and volunteer retention. Therefore, the motivation of the research was aroused, and it was hoped to use grounded theory to explore the motivation and process of becoming an Anning volunteer, and to identify related concepts, and finally establish a theoretical framework to describe the relevant decision-making mentality. Also serves as a reference for volunteer organization management training and retention of palliative care volunteers.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2024-06-12
NCT06174844
Assessment of the Humanisation of Care in Hospitals in Andalusia-Spain
Observational assessment through patient interviews of relational, structural and organisational aspects related to the humanisation of health care. These data will be related to health outcomes such as pain, sleep quality, anxiety levels, adverse events (pressure injuries, falls, and mortality), satisfaction with the care received, and experience in communication processes with health professionals. Data will also be collected on work ergonomics variables (stress, burnout, working conditions, ratios) of nurses and health technicians, which will also be related to the health outcomes collected.
Gender: All
Updated: 2024-05-08
NCT05815017
YOOMI: Effect of Gamified Physical Therapy Exercise Software on Inpatient Mobility
Patients admitted to the hospital often develop functional impairments due to being in bed most of the day. Each day of bedrest leads to significant muscle loss. As a result, many patients become dependent on others or require rehabilitation at a facility to improve mobility and function prior to returning home. Staff in the hospital is limited and often unable to mobilize patients every day while hospitalized. The investigators are testing a new experimental gamified physical therapy exercise software to see if it can be a fun, enjoyable way to help mobilize patients without the assistance of staff. The primary aim of this pilot/proof of concept study is to determine whether gamified physical therapy software can help inpatients exercise within the safety of their own beds and preserve pre-hospitalization function.
Gender: All
Ages: 65 Years - Any
Updated: 2024-03-08
1 state