Institute of Medical Informatics, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, corporate member of Freie Universität Berlin and Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, corporate member of Freie Universität Berlin and Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
JMIR Hum Factors. 2024 Jun 18;11:e55571. doi: 10.2196/55571.
The high number of unnecessary alarms in intensive care settings leads to alarm fatigue among staff and threatens patient safety. To develop and implement effective and sustainable solutions for alarm management in intensive care units (ICUs), an understanding of staff interactions with the patient monitoring system and alarm management practices is essential.
This study investigated the interaction of nurses and physicians with the patient monitoring system, their perceptions of alarm management, and smart alarm management solutions.
This explorative qualitative study with an ethnographic, multimethods approach was conducted in an ICU of a German university hospital. Using triangulation in data collection, 102 hours of field observations, 12 semistructured interviews with ICU staff members, and the results of a participatory task were analyzed. The data analysis followed an inductive, grounded theory approach.
Nurses and physicians reported interacting with the continuous vital sign monitoring system for most of their work time and tasks. There were no established standards for alarm management; instead, nurses and physicians stated that alarms were addressed through ad hoc reactions, a practice they viewed as problematic. Staff members' perceptions of intelligent alarm management varied, but they highlighted the importance of understandable and traceable suggestions to increase trust and cognitive ease.
Staff members' interactions with the omnipresent patient monitoring system and its alarms are essential parts of ICU workflows and clinical decision-making. Alarm management standards and workflows have been shown to be deficient. Our observations, as well as staff feedback, suggest that changes are warranted. Solutions for alarm management should be designed and implemented with users, workflows, and real-world data at the core.
重症监护病房中大量不必要的警报会导致医护人员的警报疲劳,并威胁到患者的安全。为了开发和实施重症监护病房(ICU)中有效的、可持续的警报管理解决方案,了解医护人员与患者监测系统的交互以及他们对警报管理的看法至关重要。
本研究调查了护士和医生与患者监测系统的交互、他们对警报管理的看法以及智能警报管理解决方案。
这是一项在德国大学医院的 ICU 中进行的探索性定性研究,采用民族志、多方法方法。通过数据收集的三角测量,对 102 小时的现场观察、12 次与 ICU 工作人员的半结构化访谈以及参与式任务的结果进行了分析。数据分析遵循归纳的、扎根的理论方法。
护士和医生报告说,他们在大部分工作时间和任务中都与连续生命体征监测系统进行交互。没有既定的警报管理标准;相反,护士和医生表示,通过临时反应来处理警报,他们认为这种做法存在问题。工作人员对智能警报管理的看法各不相同,但他们强调了提供可理解和可追踪的建议以提高信任度和认知轻松度的重要性。
工作人员与无处不在的患者监测系统及其警报的交互是 ICU 工作流程和临床决策的重要组成部分。已经证明警报管理标准和工作流程存在缺陷。我们的观察结果以及工作人员的反馈表明需要进行更改。警报管理解决方案应在以用户、工作流程和实际数据为核心的情况下进行设计和实施。