Pro-Con Debate: Universal Versus Selective Continuous Monitoring of Postoperative Patients

George T. Blike, Susan P. McGrath, Michelle A. Ochs Kinney, Bhargavi Gali
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Abstract

hesia care unit until discharge from the hospital. The strongest arguments for universal monitoring relate to inadequate assessment and algorithms for patient risk. We argue that the need for hospitalization in and of itself is a sufficient predictor of an individual’s risk for unexpected respiratory deterioration. In addition, general care units carry the added risk that even the most severe respiratory events will not be recognized in a timely fashion, largely due to higher patient to nurse staffing ratios and limited intermittent vital signs assessments (e.g., every 4 hours). Continuous monitoring configured properly using a “surveillance model” can adequately detect patients' respiratory deterioration while minimizing alarm fatigue and the costs of the surveillance systems. The Con position advocates for a mixed approach of time-limited continuous pulse oximetry monitoring for all patients receiving opioids, with additional remote pulse oximetry monitoring for patients identified as having a high risk of respiratory depression. Alarm fatigue, clinical resource limitations, and cost are the strongest arguments for selective monitoring, which is a more targeted approach. The proponents of the con position acknowledge that postoperative respiratory monitoring is certainly indicated for all patients, but not all patients need the same level of monitoring. The analysis and discussion of each point of view describes who, when, where, and how continuous monitoring should be implemented. Consideration of various system-level factors are addressed, including clinical resource availability, alarm design, system costs, patient and staff acceptance, risk-assessment algorithms, and respiratory event detection. Literature is reviewed, findings are described, and recommendations for design of monitoring systems and implementation of monitoring are described for the pro and con positions....
正反辩论:对术后患者进行普遍持续监控还是选择性持续监控
在出院前,所有患者都必须在重症监护室接受监测。普遍监测的最有力论据与病人风险评估和算法不足有关。我们认为,是否需要住院本身就足以预测患者出现意外呼吸恶化的风险。此外,普通护理病房还存在额外的风险,即使是最严重的呼吸系统事件也无法及时发现,这主要是由于病人与护士的人员配比较高以及间歇性生命体征评估有限(如每 4 小时一次)。使用 "监测模式 "对连续监测进行适当配置,可以充分检测病人呼吸系统的恶化情况,同时最大限度地减少警报疲劳和监测系统的成本。Con 的立场主张对所有接受阿片类药物治疗的患者进行有时间限制的连续脉搏血氧仪监测,并对确定为呼吸抑制高风险患者进行额外的远程脉搏血氧仪监测。警报疲劳、临床资源限制和成本是选择性监测的最有力论据,而选择性监测是一种更有针对性的方法。反方的支持者承认,术后呼吸监测当然适用于所有患者,但并非所有患者都需要相同程度的监测。对每种观点的分析和讨论都说明了应该对哪些人、何时、何地以及如何实施持续监测。对各种系统级因素进行了考虑,包括临床资源可用性、警报设计、系统成本、患者和员工的接受程度、风险评估算法以及呼吸事件检测。对文献进行了回顾,对研究结果进行了描述,并针对赞成和反对立场对监测系统的设计和监测的实施提出了建议....。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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