How Nurses Use and Evaluate the Ampoule Peel Device: Comparing Manually Opened Vs. Device-Opened Ampoules
Utilization and Evaluation of Ampoule Peel Device
Chih-Cheng Wu
16 participants
Nov 29, 2024
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
Nurses frequently handle ampoule bottles in their daily work, and due to the fragile nature of these glass bottles, manual opening often leads to hand injuries. According to studies, a high proportion of occupational injuries among nurses are caused by handling ampoule bottles, especially hand lacerations. These injuries not only affect work efficiency but also increase medical risks. Therefore, to improve safety and reduce occupational injuries, this study aims to evaluate a patented ampoule peeling device, which has also won the National Innovation Award, to assess whether it can enhance the safety and satisfaction of nurses during their work.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria1
- nursing staff members from W72, W75, and the Department of Anesthesiology, who passed the preliminary tests and are willing to continue to the subsequent phases
Exclusion Criteria1
- Nursing staff unwilling to participate, unable to manually break ampoules, experiencing difficulty during the preparatory phase, or deciding to discontinue or withdraw during the process.
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Interventions
this study is to evaluate the ampoule peeling device in terms of safety, ease of use, time efficiency, difficulty of operation, and user satisfaction among nurses when opening ampoule bottles of different capacities
Locations(1)
View Full Details on ClinicalTrials.gov
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NCT06665009