Department of Physiotherapy, School of Health Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Level 7 Alan Gilbert Building, Parkville, Melbourne, VIC, 3010, Australia.
Department of Physiotherapy, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Intensive Care Med. 2017 Apr;43(4):531-542. doi: 10.1007/s00134-017-4685-4. Epub 2017 Feb 16.
To identify, evaluate and synthesise studies examining the barriers and enablers for survivors of critical illness to participate in physical activity in the ICU and post-ICU settings from the perspective of patients, caregivers and healthcare providers.
Systematic review of articles using five electronic databases: MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, Scopus. Quantitative and qualitative studies that were published in English in a peer-reviewed journal and assessed barriers or enablers for survivors of critical illness to perform physical activity were included. Prospero ID: CRD42016035454.
Eighty-nine papers were included. Five major themes and 28 sub-themes were identified, encompassing: (1) patient physical and psychological capability to perform physical activity, including delirium, sedation, illness severity, comorbidities, weakness, anxiety, confidence and motivation; (2) safety influences, including physiological stability and concern for lines, e.g. risk of dislodgement; (3) culture and team influences, including leadership, interprofessional communication, administrative buy-in, clinician expertise and knowledge; (4) motivation and beliefs regarding the benefits/risks; and (5) environmental influences, including funding, access to rehabilitation programs, staffing and equipment.
The main barriers identified were patient physical and psychological capability to perform physical activity, safety concerns, lack of leadership and ICU culture of mobility, lack of interprofessional communication, expertise and knowledge, and lack of staffing/equipment and funding to provide rehabilitation programs. Barriers and enablers are multidimensional and span diverse factors. The majority of these barriers are modifiable and can be targeted in future clinical practice.
从患者、护理人员和医护人员的角度出发,确定、评估和综合研究重症幸存者在 ICU 内和 ICU 后环境中进行身体活动的障碍和促进因素。
使用五个电子数据库(MEDLINE、CINAHL、EMBASE、Cochrane 图书馆、Scopus)对文章进行系统回顾。纳入了发表在同行评议期刊上的评估重症幸存者进行身体活动的障碍或促进因素的英文定量和定性研究。Prospéro 编号:CRD42016035454。
共纳入 89 篇论文。确定了 5 个主要主题和 28 个亚主题,包括:(1)患者进行身体活动的身体和心理能力,包括谵妄、镇静、疾病严重程度、合并症、虚弱、焦虑、信心和动机;(2)安全影响,包括生理稳定性和对管路的关注,例如脱位风险;(3)文化和团队影响,包括领导力、跨专业沟通、行政支持、临床医生专业知识;(4)对益处/风险的动机和信念;(5)环境影响,包括资金、康复计划的获取、人员配备和设备。
确定的主要障碍是患者进行身体活动的身体和心理能力、安全问题、缺乏领导力和 ICU 移动文化、缺乏跨专业沟通、专业知识、人员配备/设备和资金来提供康复计划。障碍和促进因素是多维度的,涉及多种因素。这些障碍中的大多数是可改变的,可以在未来的临床实践中针对这些障碍进行干预。