Comparison of Supportive Therapies for Symptom Relief From Pediatric Upper Respiratory Infections (URIs)
Acute Upper Respiratory Infection, Signs and Symptoms
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for Acute Upper Respiratory Infection focused on measuring Pediatric, Upper Respiratory infection, Over the Counter Drugs, Drugs, Non-Prescription, Vaporizer
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Ages 0-18 years old
- URI symptoms of less than 1 week duration.
- No new medications prescribed during this ED visit other than antipyretics and refills of routine medications (ie. refills of bronchodilators are OK).
- Symptom severity scores of atleast 3 ("sometimes" on a Likert 7 point scale) on at least 2 survey questions related to symptom scores (cough frequency/severity, effect on the child's sleep, effect on parental sleep, combined symptom severity).
- Parent consenting the child must have two valid forms of contact information (ie. phone number and email address) in order to follow up as needed for completion of 2nd and 3rd surveys.
- Parent consenting the child must have access to internet connection or phone for the following 2-4 days after enrollment.
- Parent consenting the child must be able to fluently read and speak English without the use of aides. This study budget does not allow for multilingual resources.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Chronic pulmonary disease
- Chronic or congenital cardiac disease
- Chronic cough
- Acute pneumonia
- Any patient that will receive a new prescription from this ED visit (antibiotics, inhalers, steroids, etc)
- Any patient currently using a handheld humidifier for this URI.
Sites / Locations
- University of California San Francisco
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
No Intervention
Handheld humidifier
Control group
Study design is a nonblinded randomized controlled comparison study of pediatric patients presenting to the UCSF Emergency Department (ED) with upper respiratory infection (URI) symptoms for which the ED physician has recommended supportive care only (ie. non-prescription symptom relief). Subjects will be randomized into 2 groups: handheld humidifier group (FDA cleared medical device that uses distilled water) & control group. Both groups may use any supportive modalities desired such as over-the-counter cold medications (OTCs), room air humidifier etc. Follow up surveys will be obtained on days 1 and 2 following the ED visit to assess whether then intervention (use of handheld humidifier) improved symptom scores or reduced the use of OTC medications or room humidifier.
Subjects will manage cold symptoms with any desired supportive over the counter treatment, and complete surveys related to symptom scores and modalities used.