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Decreasing severe pain and serious adverse events while moving intensive care unit patients: a prospective interventional study (the NURSE-DO project)

INTRODUCTION: A quality-improvement project was conducted to reduce severe pain and stress-related events while moving ICU-patients. METHODS: The Plan-Do-Check-Adjust cycle was studied during four one-month phases, separated by five-month interphases. All consecutive patients staying more than 24 ho...

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Autores principales: de Jong, Audrey, Molinari, Nicolas, de Lattre, Sylvie, Gniadek, Claudine, Carr, Julie, Conseil, Mathieu, Susbielles, Marie-Pierre, Jung, Boris, Jaber, Samir, Chanques, Gérald
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3672726/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23597243
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc12683
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author de Jong, Audrey
Molinari, Nicolas
de Lattre, Sylvie
Gniadek, Claudine
Carr, Julie
Conseil, Mathieu
Susbielles, Marie-Pierre
Jung, Boris
Jaber, Samir
Chanques, Gérald
author_facet de Jong, Audrey
Molinari, Nicolas
de Lattre, Sylvie
Gniadek, Claudine
Carr, Julie
Conseil, Mathieu
Susbielles, Marie-Pierre
Jung, Boris
Jaber, Samir
Chanques, Gérald
author_sort de Jong, Audrey
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: A quality-improvement project was conducted to reduce severe pain and stress-related events while moving ICU-patients. METHODS: The Plan-Do-Check-Adjust cycle was studied during four one-month phases, separated by five-month interphases. All consecutive patients staying more than 24 hours were evaluated every morning while being moved for nursing care (bathing, massage, sheet-change, repositioning). Phase 1 was considered as the baseline. Implemented and adjusted quality-interventions were assessed at phases 2 and 3, respectively. An independent post-intervention control-audit was performed at Phase 4. Primary-endpoints were the incidence of severe pain defined by a behavioral pain scale > 5 or a 0 to 10 visual numeric rating scale > 6, and the incidence of serious adverse events (SAE): cardiac arrest, arrhythmias, tachycardia, bradycardia, hypertension, hypotension, desaturation, bradypnea or ventilatory distress. Pain, SAE, patients' characteristics and analgesia were compared among the phases by a multivariate mixed-effects model for repeated-measurements, adjusted on severity index, age, admission type (medical/surgical), intubation and sedation status. RESULTS: During the four studied phases, 630 care procedures were analyzed in 53, 47, 43 and 50 patients, respectively. Incidence of severe pain decreased significantly from 16% (baseline) to 6% in Phase 3 (odds ratio (OR) = 0.33 (0.11; 0.98), P = 0.04) and 2% in Phase 4 (OR = 0.30 (0.12; 0.95), P = 0.02). Incidence of SAE decreased significantly from 37% (baseline) to 17% in Phase 3 and 21% in Phase 4. In multivariate analysis, SAE were independently associated with Phase 3 (OR = 0.40 (0.23; 0.72), P < 0.01), Phase 4 (OR = 0.53 (0.30; 0.92), P = 0.03), intubation status (OR = 1.91 (1.28; 2.85), P < 0.01) and severe pain (OR = 2.74 (1.54; 4.89), P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Severe pain and serious adverse events are common and strongly associated while moving ICU patients for nursing procedures. Quality improvement of pain management is associated with a decrease of serious adverse events. Careful documentation of pain management during mobilization for nursing procedures could be implemented as a health quality indicator in the ICU.
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spelling pubmed-36727262013-06-06 Decreasing severe pain and serious adverse events while moving intensive care unit patients: a prospective interventional study (the NURSE-DO project) de Jong, Audrey Molinari, Nicolas de Lattre, Sylvie Gniadek, Claudine Carr, Julie Conseil, Mathieu Susbielles, Marie-Pierre Jung, Boris Jaber, Samir Chanques, Gérald Crit Care Research INTRODUCTION: A quality-improvement project was conducted to reduce severe pain and stress-related events while moving ICU-patients. METHODS: The Plan-Do-Check-Adjust cycle was studied during four one-month phases, separated by five-month interphases. All consecutive patients staying more than 24 hours were evaluated every morning while being moved for nursing care (bathing, massage, sheet-change, repositioning). Phase 1 was considered as the baseline. Implemented and adjusted quality-interventions were assessed at phases 2 and 3, respectively. An independent post-intervention control-audit was performed at Phase 4. Primary-endpoints were the incidence of severe pain defined by a behavioral pain scale > 5 or a 0 to 10 visual numeric rating scale > 6, and the incidence of serious adverse events (SAE): cardiac arrest, arrhythmias, tachycardia, bradycardia, hypertension, hypotension, desaturation, bradypnea or ventilatory distress. Pain, SAE, patients' characteristics and analgesia were compared among the phases by a multivariate mixed-effects model for repeated-measurements, adjusted on severity index, age, admission type (medical/surgical), intubation and sedation status. RESULTS: During the four studied phases, 630 care procedures were analyzed in 53, 47, 43 and 50 patients, respectively. Incidence of severe pain decreased significantly from 16% (baseline) to 6% in Phase 3 (odds ratio (OR) = 0.33 (0.11; 0.98), P = 0.04) and 2% in Phase 4 (OR = 0.30 (0.12; 0.95), P = 0.02). Incidence of SAE decreased significantly from 37% (baseline) to 17% in Phase 3 and 21% in Phase 4. In multivariate analysis, SAE were independently associated with Phase 3 (OR = 0.40 (0.23; 0.72), P < 0.01), Phase 4 (OR = 0.53 (0.30; 0.92), P = 0.03), intubation status (OR = 1.91 (1.28; 2.85), P < 0.01) and severe pain (OR = 2.74 (1.54; 4.89), P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Severe pain and serious adverse events are common and strongly associated while moving ICU patients for nursing procedures. Quality improvement of pain management is associated with a decrease of serious adverse events. Careful documentation of pain management during mobilization for nursing procedures could be implemented as a health quality indicator in the ICU. BioMed Central 2013 2013-04-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3672726/ /pubmed/23597243 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc12683 Text en Copyright © 2013 de Jong et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
de Jong, Audrey
Molinari, Nicolas
de Lattre, Sylvie
Gniadek, Claudine
Carr, Julie
Conseil, Mathieu
Susbielles, Marie-Pierre
Jung, Boris
Jaber, Samir
Chanques, Gérald
Decreasing severe pain and serious adverse events while moving intensive care unit patients: a prospective interventional study (the NURSE-DO project)
title Decreasing severe pain and serious adverse events while moving intensive care unit patients: a prospective interventional study (the NURSE-DO project)
title_full Decreasing severe pain and serious adverse events while moving intensive care unit patients: a prospective interventional study (the NURSE-DO project)
title_fullStr Decreasing severe pain and serious adverse events while moving intensive care unit patients: a prospective interventional study (the NURSE-DO project)
title_full_unstemmed Decreasing severe pain and serious adverse events while moving intensive care unit patients: a prospective interventional study (the NURSE-DO project)
title_short Decreasing severe pain and serious adverse events while moving intensive care unit patients: a prospective interventional study (the NURSE-DO project)
title_sort decreasing severe pain and serious adverse events while moving intensive care unit patients: a prospective interventional study (the nurse-do project)
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3672726/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23597243
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc12683
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