Segall Noa, Hobbs Gene, Granger Christopher B, Anderson Amanda E, Bonifacio Alberto S, Taekman Jeffrey M, Wright Melanie C
1Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC. 2Department of Medicine and Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC. 3Procurement Services, Duke University, Durham, NC. 4Trauma Program, University of North Carolina Health System, Chapel Hill, NC. 5Patient Safety Research, CHE Trinity Health and Saint Alphonsus Health System, Boise, ID.
Crit Care Med. 2015 May;43(5):1036-42. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000000923.
Remotely monitored patients may be at risk for a delayed response to critical arrhythmias if the telemetry watchers who monitor them are subject to an excessive patient load. There are no guidelines or studies regarding the appropriate number of patients that a single watcher may safely and effectively monitor. Our objective was to determine the impact of increasing the number of patients monitored on response time to simulated cardiac arrest.
Randomized trial.
Laboratory-based experiment.
Forty-two remote telemetry technicians and nurses from cardiac units.
Number of patients monitored in a simulation of cardiac telemetry monitoring work.
We carried out a study to compare response times to ventricular fibrillation across five patient loads: 16, 24, 32, 40, and 48 patients. The simulation replicated the work of telemetry watchers using a combination of real recorded patient electrocardiogram signals and a simulated patient experiencing ventricular fibrillation. Study participants were assigned to one of the five patient loads and completed a 4-hour monitoring session, during which they performed tasks-including event documentation and phone calls to report events-similar to real monitoring work. When the simulated patient sustained ventricular fibrillation, the time required to report this arrhythmia was recorded. As patient loads increased, there was a statistically significant increase in response times to the ventricular fibrillation. In addition, frequency of failure to meet a response time goal of less than 20 seconds was significantly higher in the 48-patient condition than in all other conditions. Task performance decreased as patient load increased.
As participants monitored more patients in a laboratory setting, their performance with respect to recognizing critical and noncritical events declined. This study has implications for the design of remote telemetry work and other patient monitoring tasks in critical and intermediate care units.
如果远程监测患者的遥测监护人员承担的患者负荷过重,那么这些患者可能面临对严重心律失常反应延迟的风险。目前尚无关于单个监护人员可安全有效监测的患者适当数量的指南或研究。我们的目的是确定增加监测患者数量对模拟心脏骤停反应时间的影响。
随机试验。
基于实验室的实验。
来自心脏科病房的42名远程遥测技术人员和护士。
模拟心脏遥测监测工作中监测的患者数量。
我们开展了一项研究,比较在五种患者负荷(16名、24名、32名、40名和48名患者)下对室颤的反应时间。该模拟使用真实记录的患者心电图信号和一名模拟发生室颤的患者相结合的方式,重现了遥测监护人员的工作。研究参与者被分配到五种患者负荷中的一种,并完成一次4小时的监测时段,在此期间他们执行与实际监测工作类似的任务,包括事件记录和打电话报告事件。当模拟患者发生持续性室颤时,记录报告该心律失常所需的时间。随着患者负荷增加,对室颤的反应时间在统计学上显著增加。此外,在48名患者的情况下未达到小于20秒反应时间目标的频率显著高于所有其他情况。随着患者负荷增加,任务表现下降。
当参与者在实验室环境中监测更多患者时,他们识别危急和非危急事件的表现会下降。这项研究对重症和中级护理病房的远程遥测工作及其他患者监测任务的设计具有启示意义。