Overcoming Barriers to Delirium Screening in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit

Author:

Rohlik Gina M.1,Fryer Karen R.2,Tripathi Sandeep3,Duncan Julie M.4,Coon Heather L.5,Padhya Dipti R.6,Kahoud Robert J.7

Affiliation:

1. Gina M. Rohlik is a certified clinical nurse specialist in the pediatric intensive care unit, Mayo Clinic Children’s Center, Rochester, Minnesota, and an instructor in nursing at the Mayo Clinic School of Medicine, Rochester, Minnesota.

2. Karen R. Fryer is a nurse and quality specialist in the Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.

3. Sandeep Tripathi is an attending physician in the pediatric critical care unit at Children’s Hospital of Illinois, Peoria, Illinois, and an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Illinois College of Medicine, Peoria, Illinois.

4. Julie M. Duncan is a nurse and quality coach in the pediatric intensive care unit, Mayo Clinic Children’s Center.

5. Heather L. Coon is a nurse and former quality coach in the pediatric intensive care unit, Mayo Clinic Children’s Center.

6. Dipti R. Padhya is a pediatric critical care fellow in the pediatric intensive care unit, Mayo Clinic Children’s Center.

7. Robert J. Kahoud is a pediatric intensivist and physician scientist, Mayo Clinic Children’s Center, and an assistant professor of neurology and pediatrics, Mayo Clinic School of Medicine, with special interest in acute brain dysfunction.

Abstract

BACKGROUNDDelirium is associated with poor outcomes in adults but is less extensively studied in children.OBJECTIVESTo describe a quality improvement initiative to implement delirium assessment in a pediatric intensive care unit and to identify barriers to delirium screening completion.METHODSA survey identified perceived barriers to delirium assessment. Failure modes and effects analysis characterized factors likely to impede assessment. A randomized case-control study evaluated factors affecting assessment by comparing patients always assessed with patients never assessed.RESULTSDelirium assessment was completed in 57% of opportunities over 1 year, with 2% positive screen results. Education improved screening completion by 20%. Barriers to assessment identified by survey (n = 25) included remembering to complete assessments, documentation outside workflow, and “busy patient.” Factors with high risk prediction numbers were lack of time and paper charting. Patients always assessed had more severe illness (median Pediatric Index of Mortality 2 score, 0.90 vs 0.36; P < .001), more developmental disabilities (moderate to severe pediatric cerebral performance category score, 54% vs 32%; P = .007), and admission during lower pediatric intensive care unit census (median [interquartile range], 10 [9–12] vs 12 [10–13]; P < .001) than did those never assessed (each group, n = 80). Patients receiving mechanical ventilation were less likely to be assessed (41.0% vs 51.2%, P < .001).CONCLUSIONSSuccessful implementation of pediatric delirium screening may be associated with early use of quality improvement tools to identify assessment barriers, comprehensive education, monitoring system with feedback, multidisciplinary team involvement, and incorporation into nursing workflow models.

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Subject

Critical Care Nursing,General Medicine

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