与监护仪报警率较高有关的儿科特征。

Q4 Medicine
Halley Ruppel, Spandana Makeneni, Irit R Rasooly, Daria F Ferro, Christopher P Bonafide
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:连续生理监测通常用于儿科内外科(med-surg)病房,但对临床医生来说却带来了很高的警报负担。目前尚不清楚在内外科病房产生高报警率的儿科患者的特征。目的描述与高临床报警率相关的儿科内外科患者的人口统计学和临床特征。方法:我们利用一家儿童医院现有的临床和警报数据进行了一项横断面、单点、回顾性研究。研究对象包括有报警数据的持续接受监控的外科病人。我们使用负二项回归模型来检验患者特征与每连续监测小时临床警报率之间的关联。结果:我们的最终样本包括 1,569 名患者,共连续监测了 38,501 个小时,产生了 265,432 次临床警报。外周血氧饱和度(SpO2)低报警占报警总数的 57.5%。病情复杂的患者平均每小时比病情不复杂的患者少发出 11% 的警报(P < 0.01)。年龄大于 5 岁的患者每小时发出的警报比年龄小于 5 岁的患者少 30%(P < 0.01)。与不使用辅助供氧的患者相比,使用辅助供氧的患者平均每小时多发出 39% 的警报(P < 0.01)。病情恶化风险高的患者平均每小时比非高风险患者多发出 19% 的警报(P = 0.01)。结论:在这项研究中,SpO2 警报是最常见的警报类型。研究结果凸显了儿科内外科病房中可能需要采取干预措施以减少警报的高危患者群体。儿科内外科(med-surg)病房中的大多数生理监护仪警报信息量不大,可以安全消除,以减少噪音和警报疲劳。研究表明,儿科内外科病房中 25% 的患者发出的警报几乎占所有警报的四分之三。4 这些患者是减少警报策略的潜在高收益目标;但是,我们并不知道有哪些研究描述了发出高比率警报的儿科患者的特征。儿科内外科的病人群体多种多样。各年龄段的儿童都在这些科室接受治疗,其诊断包括急性呼吸道感染、慢性病管理和精神疾病。并非所有儿科手术室的患者都接受连续的生理参数监测4 ,但在接受监测的患者中,了解与高报警率相关的患者特征可能有助于临床医生、医疗保健技术管理(HTM)专业人员和其他从事报警管理策略研究的人员制定有针对性的干预措施。我们开展了一项探索性回顾研究,以描述与儿科内外科高报警率相关的患者特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pediatric Characteristics Associated With Higher Rates of Monitor Alarms.

Background: Continuous physiologic monitoring commonly is used in pediatric medical-surgical (med-surg) units and is associated with high alarm burden for clinicians. Characteristics of pediatric patients generating high rates of alarms on med-surg units are not known. Objective: To describe the demographic and clinical characteristics of pediatric med-surg patients associated with high rates of clinical alarms. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional, single-site, retrospective study using existing clinical and alarm data from a children's hospital. Continuously monitored patients from med-surg units who had available alarm data were included. Negative binomial regression models were used to test the association between patient characteristics and the rate of clinical alarms per continuously monitored hour. Results: Our final sample consisted of 1,569 patients with a total of 38,501 continuously monitored hours generating 265,432 clinical alarms. Peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) low alarms accounted for 57.5% of alarms. Patients with medical complexity averaged 11% fewer alarms per hour than those without medical complexity (P < 0.01). Patients older than 5 years had up to 30% fewer alarms per hour than those who were younger than 5 years (P < 0.01). Patients using supplemental oxygen averaged 39% more alarms per hour compared with patients who had no supplemental oxygen use (P < 0.01). Patients at high risk for deterioration averaged 19% more alarms per hour than patients who were not high risk (P = 0.01). Conclusion: SpO2 alarms were the most common type of alarm in this study. The results highlight patient populations in pediatric medical-surgical units that may be high yield for interventions to reduce alarms. Most physiologic monitor alarms in pediatric medical-surgical (med-surg) units are not informative and likely could be safely eliminated to reduce noise and alarm fatigue.1-3 However, identifying and sustaining successful alarm-reduction strategies is a challenge. Research shows that 25% of patients in pediatric med-surg units produce almost three-quarters of all alarms.4 These patients are a potential high-yield target for alarm-reduction strategies; however, we are not aware of studies describing characteristics of pediatric patients generating high rates of alarms. The patient populations seen on pediatric med-surg units are diverse. Children of all ages are cared for on these units, with diagnoses ranging from acute respiratory infections, to management of chronic conditions, and to psychiatric conditions. Not all patients on pediatric med-surg units have physiologic parameters continuously monitored,4 but among those who do, understanding patient characteristics associated with high rates of alarms may help clinicians, healthcare technology management (HTM) professionals, and others working on alarm management strategies to develop targeted interventions. We conducted an exploratory retrospective study to describe patient characteristics associated with high rates of alarms in pediatric med-surg units.

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来源期刊
Biomedical Instrumentation and Technology
Biomedical Instrumentation and Technology Computer Science-Computer Networks and Communications
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
期刊介绍: AAMI publishes Biomedical Instrumentation & Technology (BI&T) a bi-monthly peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the developers, managers, and users of medical instrumentation and technology.
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