Studies funded by Medicines for Children Network, Norway
Medicines for Children Network, Norway, of which NorPedMed is a subsidary, has (partly) funded a few investigator initiated studies.
Results from these studies have been published in a number of articles:
- Racemic adrenaline and inhalation strategies in acute bronchiolitis
- Allergic diseases and the effect of inhaled epinephrine in children with acute bronchiolitis: follow-up from the randomised, controlled, double-blind, Bronchiolitis ALL trial
- Virus Type and Genomic Load in Acute Bronchiolitis: Severity and Treatment Response With Inhaled Adrenaline
- Disease mechanisms and clonidine treatment in adolescent chronic fatigue syndrome: a combined cross-sectional and randomized clinical trial
- Effects of low-dose clonidine on cardiovascular and autonomic variables in adolescents with chronic fatigue: a randomized controlled trial
- Early Enhanced Parenteral Nutrition, Hyperglycemia, and Death Among Extremely Low-Birth-Weight Infants
- Utilization of the tyndall effect for enhanced visual detection of particles in compatibility testing of intravenous fluids: validity and reliability
- Physicians' use of pain scale and treatment procedures among children and youth in emergency primary care - a cross sectional study
- Development and evaluation of a test program for Y-site compatibility testing of total parenteral nutrition and intravenous drugs
- The WE-Study: does botulinum toxin A make walking easier in children with cerebral palsy?: Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
- A comparison of pain assessment by physicians, parents and children in an outpatient setting
- Physical compatibility of total parenteral nutrition and drugs in Y-site administration to children from neonates to adolescents
- Physical stability of an all-in-one parenteral nutrition admixture for preterm infants upon mixing with micronutrients and drugs
- Children’s views on postsurgical pain in recovery units in Norway: A qualitative study
- Nurses’ Knowledge, Attitudes and Clinical Practice in Pediatric Postoperative Pain Management
- Use of inhaled ipratropium bromide to improve exercise-induced laryngeal obstruction cannot be recommended