Factors Influencing Use of Continuous Physiologic Monitors for Hospitalized Pediatric Patients

Author:

Schondelmeyer Amanda C.123,Jenkins Ashley M.14,Allison Brittany5,Timmons Kristen M.1,Loechtenfeldt Allison M.1,Pope-Smyth Sally T.3,Vaughn Lisa M.26

Affiliation:

1. Divisions of Hospital Medicine and

2. Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio; and

3. James M. Anderson Center for Health Systems Excellence, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio;

4. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Cincinnati Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio

5. Department of Patient Services, and

6. Emergency Medicine,

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Continuous physiologic monitors (CPMs) generate frequent alarms and are used for up to 50% of children who are hospitalized outside of the ICU. Our objective was to assess factors that influence the decision to use CPMs. METHODS: In this qualitative study, we used group-level assessment, a structured method designed to engage diverse stakeholder groups. We recruited clinicians and other staff who work on a 48-bed hospital medicine unit at a freestanding children’s hospital. We developed a list of open-ended prompts used to address CPM use on inpatient units. Demographic data were collected from each participant. We conducted 6 sessions to permit maximum participation among all groups, and themes from all sessions were merged and distilled. RESULTS: Participants (n = 78) included nurses (37%), attending physicians (17%), pediatric residents (32%), and unit staff (eg, unit coordinator; 14%). Participants identified several themes. First, there are patient factors (eg, complexity and instability) for which CPMs are useful. Second, participants perceived that alarms have negative effects on families (eg, anxiety and sleep deprivation). Third, CPMs are often used as surrogates for clinical assessments. Fourth, CPM alarms cause anxiety and fatigue for frontline staff. Fifth, the decision to use CPMs should be, but is not often, a team decision. Sixth, and finally, there are issues related to the monitor system’s setup that reduces its utility. CONCLUSIONS: Hospital medicine staff identified patient-, staff-, and system-level factors relevant to CPM use for children who were hospitalized. These data will inform the development of system-level interventions to improve CPM use and address high alarm rates.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference24 articles.

1. The frequency of physiologic monitor alarms in a children’s hospital;Schondelmeyer;J Hosp Med,2016

2. Physiologic monitor alarm rates at 5 children’s hospitals;Schondelmeyer;J Hosp Med,2018

3. Monitor alarm fatigue: an integrative review;Cvach;Biomed Instrum Technol,2012

4. What type of monitoring has been shown to improve outcomes in acutely ill patients?;Ospina-Tascón;Intensive Care Med,2008

5. Alarming monitor problems;Weil;Nursing,2009

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