Department of Anesthesiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, United States.
Institute for Informatics, Data Science and Biostatistics, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, United States.
Appl Clin Inform. 2024 Jan;15(1):178-191. doi: 10.1055/s-0044-1780508. Epub 2024 Mar 6.
Unplanned intensive care unit (ICU) admissions from medical/surgical floors and increased boarding times of ICU patients in the emergency department (ED) are common; approximately half of these are associated with adverse events. We explore the potential role of a tele-critical care consult service (TC3) in managing critically ill patients outside of the ICU and potentially preventing low-acuity unplanned admissions and also investigate its design and implementation needs.
We conducted a qualitative study involving general observations of the units, shadowing of clinicians during patient transfers, and interviews with clinicians from the ED, medical/surgical floor units and their ICU counterparts, tele-ICU, and the rapid response team at a large academic medical center in St. Louis, Missouri, United States. We used a hybrid thematic analysis approach supported by open and structured coding using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR).
Over 165 hours of observations/shadowing and 26 clinician interviews were conducted. Our findings suggest that a tele-critical care consult (TC3) service can prevent avoidable, lower acuity ICU admissions by offering a second set of eyes via remote monitoring and providing guidance to bedside and rapid response teams in the care delivery of these patients on the floor/ED. CFIR-informed enablers impacting the successful implementation of the TC3 service included the optional and on-demand features of the TC3 service, around-the-clock availability, and continuous access to trained critical care clinicians for avoidable lower acuity (ALA) patients outside of the ICU, familiarity with tele-ICU staff, and a willingness to try alternative patient risk mitigation strategies for ALA patients (suggested by TC3), before transferring all unplanned admissions to ICUs. Conversely, the CFIR-informed barriers to implementation included a desire to uphold physician autonomy by floor/ED clinicians, potential role conflicts with rapid response teams, additional workload for floor/ED nurses, concerns about obstructing unavoidable, higher acuity admissions, and discomfort with audio-visual tools. To amplify these potential enablers and mitigate potential barriers to TC3 implementation, informed by this study, we propose essential for extending the delivery of critical care services beyond the ICUunderlying a telemedicine critical care consultation model including its and service features.
Tele-critical care represents an innovative strategy for delivering safe and high-quality critical care services to lower acuity borderline patients outside the ICU setting.
从医疗/外科病房转入重症监护病房(ICU)和急诊部(ED)的 ICU 患者滞留时间增加是常见现象;其中约有一半与不良事件有关。我们探讨了远程重症监护咨询服务(TC3)在管理 ICU 外重症患者方面的潜在作用,以及该服务是否可能防止低危非计划转入 ICU,并对其设计和实施需求进行了调查。
我们在美国密苏里州圣路易斯市的一家大型学术医疗中心,对 ED、医疗/外科病房及其 ICU 对应科室、远程 ICU 和快速反应小组的临床医生进行了一般观察、患者转科时的跟班观察和访谈,开展了一项定性研究。我们采用了一种混合主题分析方法,该方法使用了开放和结构化编码,并辅以实施研究综合框架(CFIR)。
进行了 165 多个小时的观察/跟班和 26 次临床医生访谈。我们的研究结果表明,远程重症监护咨询(TC3)服务可以通过远程监测提供第二组眼睛,并为床边和快速反应小组提供指导,从而防止可避免的低危 ICU 转入,对 ED 和病房中的这些患者进行护理。CFIR 实施推动因素包括 TC3 服务的可选和按需功能、24 小时可用性以及对 ICU 外可避免低危(ALA)患者的训练有素的重症监护临床医生的持续访问,临床医生对远程 ICU 工作人员的熟悉程度以及对 TC3 建议的 ALA 患者的替代风险缓解策略的尝试意愿,然后将所有非计划转入 ICU 的患者转入。相反,CFIR 实施障碍包括 ED 和病房临床医生维护医生自主权的愿望、与快速反应小组的潜在角色冲突、对 ED 和病房护士的额外工作量、对阻碍不可避免的更高危转入的担忧以及对音频-视觉工具的不适应。为了增强 TC3 实施的这些潜在推动因素并减轻潜在障碍,我们根据这项研究提出了一个必要的建议,以在 telemedicine critical care consultation model 下扩展 ICU 以外的重症监护服务,包括其服务功能。
远程重症监护代表了一种创新策略,可以在 ICU 外为低危边缘患者提供安全和高质量的重症监护服务。