In many hospitals, clogs, usually white, are provided for healthcare workers. In our hospital, health care professionals from the department of intensive care medicine may be summoned to an emergency situation on a 24/7 basis. Clogs are thought to be of importance for running. Although clogs are available in several sizes, clog size is typically left to the discretion of the individual healthcare worker. Interestingly, The primary goal of this randomized controlled trial is to assess if wearing large size clogs as compared to small size clogs results in increased running speed. Participants will be randomized to small versus large clog size using a using randomly permuted blocks stratified by gender. Following randomization, participants will wear the clogs of allocated size and complete a standardized running course. The primary endpoint is the time taken to complete the course. The enrolment of 50 subjects would provide 80% power to show a 5-second difference in the response time at an average response time of 30 seconds with a 6 second standard deviation. The ethical committee judged the study protocol exempt from extensive review.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
50
Participants will be randomized to run in small clogs
Participants will be randomized to run in large clogs
Amsterdam UMC, location VUmc
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Time to complete the running course
The time to complete the course will be compared between the two groups using a linear model with the randomized allocation and the stratification variable as covariates.
Time frame: Follow-up until 60 minutes.
Adverse events
Time frame: Follow-up until 60 minutes.
Time to complete the running course for specific subgroups: By gender, job function, level of fitness.
Time frame: Follow-up until 60 minutes.
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