Department of Pediatrics, Division of Critical Care Medicine, Seattle Children's Hospital, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington.
Department of Respiratory Care, Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, Washington.
Respir Care. 2020 Mar;65(3):333-340. doi: 10.4187/respcare.06877. Epub 2020 Jan 28.
There is evidence that ventilator weaning protocols provide benefit to children receiving mechanical ventilation, but many protocols do not include explicit instructions for decreasing ventilator support from maximal settings. We evaluated care provider opinions on ventilator weaning recommendations made by a computerized decision support tool.
Recommendations for ventilator adjustment were generated using a computerized decision support tool based on the ARDSNet protocol using data from children with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure admitted to the pediatric ICU (PICU). Attending physicians, fellows, nurse practitioners, and respiratory therapists (RTs) caring for these patients answered a brief survey to assess whether recommendations were reasonable and whether the practitioner believed they could be implemented.
RTs completed 99 surveys and ICU providers completed 96 surveys based on data from 10 patients. RTs and ICU providers found 63.9% and 65.3% of recommendations reasonable, respectively. There were 5 instances of disagreement between RTs and ICU providers. The percent of recommendations that RTs thought could be implemented was 29.9%, whereas this figure for ICU providers was 26.3%, with 4 instances of disagreement. Free-text responses indicated that many RTs and ICU providers were concerned about disrupting current patient stability and low tidal volumes.
On initial evaluation, the decision support tool did not appear to be highly acceptable to RTs and ICU providers in our setting because recommendations were rarely implemented. In addition, acceptability did not increase over time as patients generally improved. Most respondents preferred to make no ventilator changes and felt the recommendations were too aggressive. The notable barrier to use was a perception of potential patient instability with weaning.
有证据表明,呼吸机撤机方案对接受机械通气的儿童有益,但许多方案并未包含从最大设置逐渐降低呼吸机支持的明确说明。我们评估了护理人员对计算机化决策支持工具提出的呼吸机撤机建议的意见。
使用基于 ARDSNet 方案的计算机化决策支持工具,根据急性低氧性呼吸衰竭患儿入住儿科 ICU(PICU)的数据生成呼吸机调整建议。负责这些患者的主治医生、住院医师、执业护士和呼吸治疗师(RT)回答了一份简短的调查问卷,以评估建议是否合理,以及护理人员是否认为可以实施。
RT 完成了 99 份调查问卷,而 ICU 提供者则根据 10 名患者的数据完成了 96 份调查问卷。RT 和 ICU 提供者分别认为 63.9%和 65.3%的建议合理。RT 和 ICU 提供者之间存在 5 次分歧。RT 认为可以实施的建议百分比为 29.9%,而 ICU 提供者的这一比例为 26.3%,存在 4 次分歧。自由文本回复表明,许多 RT 和 ICU 提供者担心会扰乱当前患者的稳定状态和低潮气量。
在初步评估中,决策支持工具在我们的环境中似乎并没有得到 RT 和 ICU 提供者的高度认可,因为建议很少被实施。此外,随着患者病情的普遍改善,接受度并没有增加。大多数受访者宁愿不进行呼吸机更改,并认为这些建议过于激进。使用的明显障碍是撤机时对潜在患者不稳定的看法。