Division of Trauma, Department of Surgery, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
J Surg Res. 2012 Oct;177(2):310-4. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2012.05.038. Epub 2012 Jun 1.
Sleep deprivation, common in intensive care unit (ICU) patients, may be associated with increased morbidity and/or mortality. We previously demonstrated that significant numbers of nocturnal nursing interactions (NNIs) occur during the routine care of surgical ICU patients. For this study, we assessed the quantity and type of NNIs in different ICU types: medical, surgical, cardiothoracic, pediatric, and neonatal. We hypothesized that the number and type of NNIs vary among different ICU types.
We performed a prospective observational cohort study at our academic medical center examining potential sleep disruption in ICU patients secondary to NNIs from the hours 2200-0600 nightly. From May through November 2011, bedside nursing staff in five different ICUs collected data on NNIs, including the frequency and nature of each event (patient care activity, nursing intervention, nursing assessment, or patient-initiated contact) as well as the length of time of each event and whether the bedside care provider thought that the event could have been safely omitted without negatively affecting patient care. Additional data collected included patient demographics, the need for mechanical ventilation, and sedative/narcotic use.
Two hundred ICU patients were enrolled over 51 separate nocturnal time periods (3.9 patients/nocturnal time period). Of those 200 patients, 53 (26.5%) were mechanically ventilated; 12.5% underwent sedative infusion; and 23.0% underwent narcotic infusion. There were a total of 1831 NNIs; most (67%) were due to nursing assessment or patient care activity. The surgical ICU had the most frequent NNIs (11.8 ± 9.0), although they were the shortest (6.66 ± 6.06 min), as well as the highest proportion of NNIs that could have been safely omitted (20.9%). Nursing staff estimated that, of all NNIs in all ICU types, 13.9% could have been safely omitted.
NNIs occur frequently and vary across different ICU types. Many NNIs are due to nursing assessment and patient care activities, much of which could be safely omitted or clustered. A protocol for nocturnal sleep promotion is warranted in order to standardize ICU NNIs and minimize nighttime sleep disruptions.
在重症监护病房(ICU)患者中,睡眠剥夺很常见,可能与发病率和/或死亡率增加有关。我们之前的研究表明,在外科 ICU 患者的常规护理过程中,会发生大量夜间护理交互(Nursing Interactions,NNI)。在这项研究中,我们评估了不同类型 ICU(内科、外科、心胸外科、儿科和新生儿科)中 NNI 的数量和类型。我们假设不同 ICU 类型之间的 NNI 数量和类型会有所不同。
我们在我们的学术医疗中心进行了一项前瞻性观察队列研究,以评估由于夜间 2200-0600 点每小时发生的 NNI 而导致 ICU 患者潜在睡眠中断的情况。从 2011 年 5 月到 11 月,5 个不同 ICU 的床边护理人员收集了 NNI 数据,包括每个事件的频率和性质(患者护理活动、护理干预、护理评估或患者发起的接触)以及每个事件的持续时间,以及护理人员是否认为该事件可以安全省略而不会对患者护理产生负面影响。收集的其他数据包括患者人口统计学、机械通气需求以及镇静/麻醉药物的使用。
共有 200 名 ICU 患者参与了 51 个不同的夜间时间段(每个夜间时间段 3.9 名患者)。在这 200 名患者中,有 53 名(26.5%)需要机械通气;12.5%的患者需要镇静药物输注;23.0%的患者需要麻醉药物输注。共有 1831 次 NNI;大多数(67%)是由于护理评估或患者护理活动引起的。外科 ICU 的 NNI 最频繁(11.8±9.0),尽管它们最短(6.66±6.06 分钟),并且可以安全省略的 NNI 比例最高(20.9%)。护理人员估计,在所有 ICU 类型的所有 NNI 中,有 13.9%可以安全省略。
NNI 发生频繁,且在不同 ICU 类型之间存在差异。许多 NNI 是由于护理评估和患者护理活动引起的,其中大部分可以安全省略或集中处理。需要制定夜间促进睡眠的方案,以标准化 ICU NNI,并最大程度地减少夜间睡眠中断。