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Active clinical trials for "Asthma"

Results 161-170 of 3412

Effects of Regular Submaximal Exercise on Asthma Control and Quality of Life in Patients With Persistent...

Chronic Asthma

The effects of regular exercise on asthma control has not yet been well demonstrated. The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of submaximal physical exercise on quality of life, on symptomatic control, and on bronchial and systemic inflammatory markers in patients with persistant asthma.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Pulmonary Specialist-Health Coach Consult Model Study

COPD Asthma

The Pulmonary Specialist-Health Coach Consultation (PuSHCon) study examines the implementation of health coach-assisted consultations to improve access to specialist care and implementation of specialist recommendations for patients with COPD, asthma, and asthma COPD overlap syndrome (ACOS) for low-income and vulnerable patients seen at public health clinics. Three hundred sixty (360) patients from ten clinics will be enrolled in the study and randomized at the individual level to receive health coaching or usual care; 180 patients will receive usual care and 180 patients will receive the PuSHCon model.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Implementation of Evidence-based Breathing Retraining for Patients With Asthma in Region Zealand...

Asthma

This study aims to implement the evidence-based intervention breathing retraining into clinical care of patients with symptomatic asthma irrespective of asthma severity or comorbidities, and in a diverse multicentre setting to evaluate implementation outcomes. This will meet patients' needs and improve health and life situation in patients with uncontrolled asthma. Further, the study will evaluate implementation outcomes.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Simultaneously Implementing Pathways for Improving Asthma, Pneumonia, and Bronchiolitis Care for...

AsthmaPneumonia1 more

This study's objective is to identify and test pragmatic and sustainable strategies for implementing a multi-condition clinical pathway intervention for children hospitalized with asthma, pneumonia, or bronchiolitis in community hospitals. The hypothesis is that the multi-condition pathway intervention will be associated with significantly greater increases in clinicians' adoption of evidence-based practices compared to control. The study is a pragmatic, cluster-randomized trial in US community hospitals. The primary outcome will be adoption of evidence-based practices over a sustained period of 2 years. Secondary outcomes include length of hospital stay, intensive care unit transfer, and hospital readmission/emergency department revisit.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Symptom-driven ICS/LABA Therapy for Patients With Asthma Non-adherent to Daily Maintenance Inhalers...

AsthmaNonadherence1 more

Inhaler nonadherence is a common problem that has been estimated to account for approximately 60% of all asthma-related hospitalizations. Unfortunately, prior interventions to improve inhaler nonadherence have shown a lack of long-term success. This study proposes to assess the problem of non-adherence using a D&I research lens while testing a new inhaler approach to potentially ameliorate the detrimental consequences of maintenance inhaler nonadherence.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Salbutamol Use in Ozone Air Pollution by People With Asthma and/or Exercise Induced Bronchoconstriction...

Asthma and/or Exercise Induced BronchoconstrictionOzone Air Pollution

Salbutamol use is increased in areas with high levels of ozone pollution and the potential consequences of this are not well known. The purpose of this study is to examine the effect of salbutamol on lung function and inflammation in people with asthma and/or EIB exercising in ozone air pollution. To examine this, we are planning a randomized cross over trial where people with asthma and/or EIB complete sub maximal exercise in four conditions on four separate days. The four condition are: ozone + salbutamol, filtered air + salbutamol, ozone + placebo medication, and filtered air + placebo medication.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Telemedicine System and Intelligent Monitoring System Construction of Pediatric Asthma Based on...

Asthma

The purpose of this study is to retrofit the existing electronic stethoscope, improve the quality and efficiency of signal acquisition and the intelligent degree of information processing, decrease the manual action of electronic stethoscopes implemented by parents of asthma children, simplify the process of data transfer and the user's operational cost using signal processing, artificial intelligence technology, thus decreasing the feedback cycle between patients and clinicians. Eventually, we will construct an intelligent monitoring system based on the modified electronic stethoscope and explore the interactive remote management approaches on children's asthma at the same time, thus achieving revolutionized remote management of asthma.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Viral Mucosal Reprogramming

AsthmaAllergic Rhinitis2 more

This is a mechanistic, controlled, open-label, single-site study to evaluate the effects of RG-RV16 inoculation on airway mucosal gene expression and airway remodeling in 25 healthy controls (HC), in 25 allergic rhinitis subjects (AR) with cat dander allergy, and in 25 allergic asthmatic subjects (AA) with cat dander allergy. Three groups (HC, AR, and AA) will undergo screening to establish clinical history, will undergo pulmonary function testing (spirometry), and will have blood drawn for clinical characterization (IgE, , ImmunoCAP, CBC and differential), and for assessing the presence of existing neutralizing antibody against RV16. Only those who meet criteria will be permitted to continue into the interventional and run-out phases of the study.

Recruiting72 enrollment criteria

Telemedicine Enhanced Asthma Management - Uniting Providers for Teens (TEAM-UP for Teens)

Asthma in Children

Low-income, minority teenagers have disproportionately high rates of asthma morbidity, including excess risk of emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and death from asthma. Despite well established guidelines, under-treatment for asthma is common, particularly for poor urban teens. This study aims to test a novel, developmentally appropriate and scalable model of care to ensure optimal guideline-based treatment for urban teens with difficult to control asthma. The Telemedicine Enhanced Asthma Management-Uniting Providers for Teens (TEAM-UP for Teens) program includes 3 core components: 1- An individualized asthma management plan developed at the start of the school year via a real-time, synchronous school-based telemedicine visit that directly connects the teen to an asthma specialist, 2- School-based or video supported directly observed therapy (DOT) to implement the medication plan and allow for teens to experience the benefits of consistent therapy, 3- Follow-up telehealth visits with a nurse asthma educator to facilitate ongoing care and provide developmentally appropriate self-management support. This study is a randomized trial of TEAM-UP for Teens vs an enhanced care (EC) control group (n=360, 12-16 years). We will assess the effectiveness of the program in reducing morbidity and improving guideline-based asthma care. Our main hypothesis is that Teens receiving the TEAM-UP for Teens intervention will have more symptom-free days at 3, 5, 7, and 12-months compared to EC. We will assess a number of secondary outcomes, including additional clinical outcomes, functional outcomes, airway inflammation, and receipt of specific care measures including medication adjustments and treatment of and other comorbidities. We will also identify potential mediators and moderators of the intervention effect, and will evaluate the process of intervention implementation. At the completion of the study, the program will be better defined as a sustainable means to improve care and reduce morbidity for high risk teens with difficult to control asthma.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Feasibility of a Smartphone Application for Asthma Self-management

Asthma Chronic

The primary goal of this project is to determine the feasibility, acceptability, and adherence of a smartphone application for improving asthma self-management in a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT). The app is specifically designed to appeal to adolescents. Adolescents with persistent asthma will be randomized to receive: 1) standard-of-care or 2) the self-management app in addition to standard-of-care. Feasibility will be assessed by the ability to recruit and retain subjects, technical barriers to implementation, and the appropriateness of the intervention among adolescents and providers. The acceptability of the intervention will be determined by appraising perceived usefulness, entertainment, and ease of use of the app. Adherence to usage of the app over a 6-month period will be assessed by examining the frequency of app usage and the features that were used, and the extent of data regarding self-management that was entered. A secondary objective is to obtain preliminary estimates of effectiveness of the app on clinical outcomes (ACT score, spirometry, CHSA-C, exacerbations, and medication adherence) relative to standard-of-care. It is hypothesized that the app will result in a high level of adherence and will be a feasible and acceptable intervention to improve self-management among adolescents with persistent asthma.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria
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