Centre for Anaesthesiological Research, Department of Anaesthesiology, Zealand University Hospital, Køge, Denmark.
Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, Copenhagen University, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 2020 Apr;64(4):532-537. doi: 10.1111/aas.13529. Epub 2019 Dec 30.
Numerous patients experience long-term impairments after discharge from the intensive care unit (ICU), including physical, psychological and cognitive deficiencies. This study aims to investigate the knowledge and handling of post-intensive care impairments among Danish doctors and nurses in the medical and surgical wards.
An electronic questionnaire survey was distributed to consultants and development nurses, head nurses and assistant head nurses at departments of abdominal surgery and internal medicine of hospitals with an ICU in the Region Zealand of Denmark.
We invited 350 employees to participate, 48% responded. Most participants, 82.8% nurses and 86.6% doctors, reported their knowledge of in-hospital needs of the ICU patients to be average or higher. Sixty per cent of doctors reported having average or higher knowledge of the patients' post-discharge needs. More than half the doctors (60.2%) reported that they "Rarely" or "Never" addressed possible ICU-related impairments in the discharge summary. During hospital admission, 22.9% replied "No screening performed" for physical impairment, while the rates for psychological and cognitive impairments were 70.7% and 57.3%, respectively. Most respondents believed that doctors (92.8%) and nurses (92.1%) in the ward and ICU doctors (89.4%) play an important role in detecting ICU-related impairments; 63.8% felt that general practitioners play a key role.
Doctors and nurses generally reported having average or higher knowledge of ICU patients' in-hospital needs, but few screened systematically for ICU-related impairments. Most respondents believed that detecting these problems is a shared responsibility between professionals in the primary and, especially, the secondary healthcare sector.
许多患者在从重症监护病房(ICU)出院后会长期出现身体、心理和认知方面的障碍。本研究旨在调查丹麦内科和外科病房的医生和护士对 ICU 后损伤的认识和处理情况。
对丹麦 Zealand 地区 ICU 病房的腹部外科和内科部门的顾问、发展护士、护士长和助理护士长进行了电子问卷调查。
我们邀请了 350 名员工参与,有 48%的人做出了回应。大多数参与者,即 82.8%的护士和 86.6%的医生,报告说他们对 ICU 患者住院期间的需求有中等或更高的了解。60%的医生报告说,他们对患者出院后的需求有中等或更高的了解。超过一半的医生(60.2%)表示,他们在出院小结中“很少”或“从不”提及可能与 ICU 相关的损伤。在住院期间,22.9%的人回答对身体损伤“未进行筛查”,而对心理和认知损伤的发生率分别为 70.7%和 57.3%。大多数受访者认为病房中的医生(92.8%)和护士(92.1%)以及 ICU 医生(89.4%)在发现 ICU 相关损伤方面发挥着重要作用;63.8%的人认为全科医生发挥着关键作用。
医生和护士普遍报告说对 ICU 患者住院期间的需求有中等或更高的了解,但很少对与 ICU 相关的损伤进行系统筛查。大多数受访者认为,发现这些问题是初级保健,尤其是二级保健部门专业人员的共同责任。