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Does Eliminating Alarm Noise Cacophony for Intensive Care Staff and Patients Improve Burnout and Encephalopathy Levels
The goal of the trial is to learn if a strategy to eliminate audible alarm noise in intensive care and high dependency units can reduce overall noise levels, patient delirium, staff alarm fatigue, and staff burnout. Researchers will implement a silent alarm strategy in specific care units for four weeks and compare this to a separate 4 weeks where a silent strategy is not implemented. Noise, burnout, delirium levels, and staff alarm response times will be compared between the silent and non-silent units.
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Udayananda Multispecialty Hospital
Nandyāl, Andrah Pradesh, India
Start Date
February 3, 2026
Primary Completion Date
April 28, 2026
Completion Date
April 28, 2026
Last Updated
February 6, 2026
200
ESTIMATED participants
Silent alarm strategy
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
MindWave Medical Inc
Data Source & Attribution
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Modifications: This data has been reformatted for display purposes. Eligibility criteria have been parsed into inclusion/exclusion sections. Location data has been geocoded to enable distance-based search. For the authoritative and most current information, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
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View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT05481138