使用多感觉触觉整合改善重症监护病房的监测

Kendall J. Burdick, A. Bell, Mary C. McCoy, Jonathan L. Samuels, Alex S. Jolly, Seema S. Patel, Julia B. Balas, K. J. Patten, J. Schlesinger
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引用次数: 5

摘要

摘要简介:报警疲劳和医疗报警管理不善降低了患者的护理质量,并给临床医生创造了紧张的工作环境。在这里,一种利用听觉和触觉刺激的多感官整合的新型“预警”系统的可行性被研究作为一种可能的解决方案。方法:三个生命体征(心率、血压和血氧)由三个音乐上不同的声音表示,这些声音组合成声景,并通过五个预警区域(非常低到非常高)进行进展。用听觉刺激测试了三种触觉条件,以确定听觉和触觉刺激的最佳组合。定性数据通过调查和NASA TLX指数收集。结果:频率和音色的变化在传递生命体征区变化信息方面最有效,准确度较高,反应时间(RT)较快,p < 0.01。在听觉声景的基础上增加触觉刺激并没有引起研究参与者准确性或rt的显著下降。然而,与无感觉条件相比,训练两周后,参与者执行任务的速度显著加快(p < 0.001),并且感觉警报监测任务的认知要求显著降低(p < 0.01)。通过增加触觉刺激,参与者在识别不断变化的生命体征方面也更有信心。讨论:目前的研究表明,多感官信号不会减少对传输信息的感知,并表明有效的训练优于单模信号。随着时间的推移,与单感觉训练相比,多感觉训练可能是有益的,因为它具有更强的巩固效果。支持触觉输入与现有听觉报警系统和训练的潜在集成。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Using Multisensory Haptic Integration to Improve Monitoring in the Intensive Care Unit
Using Multisensory Haptic Integration to Improve Monitoring in the Intensive Care Unit, Auditory Perception & Cognition ABSTRACT Introduction: Alarm fatigue and medical alarm mismanagement reduces the quality of patient care and creates stressful work environments for clinicians. Here, the feasibility of a novel “pre-alarm” system that utilizes multisensory integration of auditory and haptic stimuli is examined as a possible solution. Methods: Three vital signs (heart rate, blood pressure, and blood oxygenation) were represented by three musically distinct sounds that were combined into soundscapes and progressed through five pre-alarm zones (very low to very high). Three haptic conditions were tested with the auditory stimulus to determine the best combination of auditory and haptic stimulation. Qualitative data was collected through surveys and the NASA TLX index. Results: Alterations in frequency and timbre were most effective at transmitting information regarding changing vital sign zones with comparatively higher accuracy and quicker reaction time (RT), p <.01. The addition of haptic stimuli to the auditory soundscape caused no significant decline in study participant accuracy or RT. However, two weeks after training, participants performed the tasks significantly faster ( p <.001) and felt the alarm monitoring task was significantly less cognitively demanding ( p <.01), compared to the unisensory condition. Participants also felt more confident in identifying changing vital signs with the addition of haptic stimuli. Discussion: The current study demonstrates that multisensory sig- nals do not diminish the perception of transmitted information and suggest efficient training benefits over unimodal signals. Multisensory training may be beneficial over time compared to unisensory training due to a stronger consolidation effect. The potential integration of haptic input with existing auditory alarm systems and training is supported.
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