Stevens Bonnie, Bueno Mariana, Barwick Melanie, Campbell-Yeo Marsha, Chambers Christine, Estabrooks Carole, Flynn Rachel, Gibbins Sharyn, Harrison Denise, Isaranuwatchai Wanrudee, LeMay Sylvie, Noel Melanie, Stinson Jennifer, Synnes Anne, Victor Charles, Yamada Janet
The Hospital for Sick Children, Research Institute, Child Health and Evaluative Sciences, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing & Faculties of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Pain. 2024 Dec 6;166(7):1587-1596. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003496.
Implementation of infant pain practice change (ImPaC) is a multifaceted web-based resource to support pain practice change in neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). We evaluated the (1) intervention effectiveness and (2) implementation effectiveness of ImPaC using a hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation study (ie, cluster randomized controlled trial and longitudinal descriptive study). Eligible level 2 and 3 Canadian NICUs were randomized to intervention (INT) or waitlisted to usual care (UC) for 6 months. We assessed the number of painful procedures, proportion of procedures accompanied by valid assessment and evidence-based treatment, and pain intensity to determine intervention effectiveness using intention-to-treat (ITT) and wait-list (WL) analyses. Implementation feasibility and fidelity were explored. Twenty-three NICUs participated (12 INT, 11 UC). Thirty infants/NICU were included in the ITT (INT = 354, UC = 325) and the WL (INT = 678, UC = 325) analyses. In the ITT analysis, the average number of painful procedures/infant/day was lower in the INT group [2.62 (±3.47) vs 3.85 (±4.13), P < 0.001] than in the UC group. Pain assessment was greater in the INT group (34.7% vs 25.5%, P < 0.001) and pain intensity scores were lower [1.47 (1.25) vs 1.86 (1.97); P = 0.029]. Similarly, in the WL analysis, there were fewer painful procedures/infant/day [3.11 (±3.98) vs 3.85 (±4.13), P = 0.003] and increased pain assessment (30.4% vs 25.5%, P = 0.0001) and treatment (31.2% vs 24.0%, P < 0.001) in the INT group. Feasibility and implementation fidelity were associated with improved clinical outcomes.
婴儿疼痛实践变革实施(ImPaC)是一种多方面的基于网络的资源,用于支持新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)的疼痛实践变革。我们使用混合型1有效性-实施研究(即整群随机对照试验和纵向描述性研究)评估了ImPaC的(1)干预有效性和(2)实施有效性。符合条件的加拿大二级和三级NICU被随机分为干预组(INT)或等待接受常规护理(UC)6个月。我们评估了疼痛操作的数量、伴有有效评估和循证治疗的操作比例以及疼痛强度,以使用意向性分析(ITT)和等待列表(WL)分析来确定干预有效性。探讨了实施的可行性和保真度。23个NICU参与了研究(12个INT组,11个UC组)。30名婴儿/ NICU被纳入ITT分析(INT = 354,UC = 325)和WL分析(INT = 678,UC = 325)。在ITT分析中,INT组中每名婴儿每天的平均疼痛操作数量低于UC组[2.62(±3.47)对3.85(±4.13),P < 0.001]。INT组的疼痛评估更高(34.7%对25.5%,P < 0.001),疼痛强度评分更低[1.47(1.25)对1.86(1.97);P = 0.029]。同样,在WL分析中,INT组中每名婴儿每天的疼痛操作更少[3.11(±3.98)对3.85(±4.13),P = 0.003],疼痛评估增加(30.4%对25.5%,P = 0.0001),治疗增加(31.2%对24.0%,P < 0.001)。可行性和实施保真度与改善的临床结果相关。