Rose Louise, Istanboulian Laura, Allum Laura, Burry Lisa, Dale Craig, Hart Nicholas, Kydonaki Kalliopi, Ramsay Pam, Pattison Natalie, Connolly Bronwen
Provincial Centre of Weaning Excellence, Michael Garron Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Lane Fox Clinical Respiratory Physiology Research Centre, London, United Kingdom.
Crit Care Explor. 2019 Apr 17;1(4):e0005. doi: 10.1097/CCE.0000000000000005. eCollection 2019 Apr.
To identify actionable processes of care, quality indicators, or performance measures and their evidence base relevant to patients with persistent or chronic critical illness and their family members including themes relating to patient/family experience.
Two authors independently searched electronic, systemic review, and trial registration databases (inception to November 2016).
We included studies with an ICU length of stay of greater than or equal to 7 days as an inclusion criterion and reported actionable processes of care; quality improvement indicators, measures, or tools; or patient/family experience. We excluded case series/reports of less than 10 patients.
Paired authors independently extracted data and performed risk of bias assessment.
We screened 13,130 references identifying 114 primary studies and 102 relevant reviews. Primary studies reported data on 24,252 participants; median (interquartile range) sample size of 70 (32-182). We identified 42 distinct actionable processes of care, the most commonly investigated related to categories of 1) weaning methods (21 studies; 27 reviews); 2) rehabilitation, mobilization, and physiotherapy (20 studies; 40 reviews); and 3) provision of information, prognosis, and family communication (14 studies; 11 reviews). Processes with limited evidence were generally more patient-centered categories such as communication, promotion of sleep, symptom management, or family support. Of the 21 randomized controlled trials, only two were considered at low risk of bias across all six domains, whereas just two cohort studies and one qualitative study were considered of high quality.
We identified 42 distinct actionable processes of care relevant to patients with persistent or chronic critical illness and their families, with most frequently studied processes relating to weaning, rehabilitation/mobilization, and family communication. Qualitative studies highlighted the need to address psychologic needs and distressing symptoms as well as enabling patient communication. Our findings are informative for clinicians and decision-makers when planning high-quality patient and family-focused care.
识别与持续性或慢性危重症患者及其家庭成员相关的可采取行动的护理流程、质量指标或绩效衡量标准及其证据基础,包括与患者/家庭体验相关的主题。
两位作者独立检索了电子数据库、系统评价和试验注册数据库(起始时间至2016年11月)。
我们纳入入住重症监护病房(ICU)时长大于或等于7天的研究作为纳入标准,并报告可采取行动的护理流程;质量改进指标、衡量标准或工具;或患者/家庭体验。我们排除了患者少于10例的病例系列/报告。
配对作者独立提取数据并进行偏倚风险评估。
我们筛选了13130篇参考文献,确定了114项主要研究和102篇相关综述。主要研究报告了24252名参与者的数据;样本量中位数(四分位间距)为70(32 - 182)。我们确定了42个不同的可采取行动的护理流程,最常研究的涉及以下类别:1)撤机方法(21项研究;27篇综述);2)康复、活动和物理治疗(20项研究;40篇综述);3)提供信息、预后和家庭沟通(14项研究;11篇综述)。证据有限的流程通常更以患者为中心,如沟通、促进睡眠、症状管理或家庭支持。在21项随机对照试验中,只有两项在所有六个领域被认为偏倚风险较低,而只有两项队列研究和一项定性研究被认为质量较高。
我们确定了42个与持续性或慢性危重症患者及其家庭相关的不同的可采取行动的护理流程,最常研究的流程涉及撤机、康复/活动和家庭沟通。定性研究强调了满足心理需求和困扰症状以及促进患者沟通的必要性。我们的研究结果为临床医生和决策者在规划以患者和家庭为中心的高质量护理时提供了参考。