Sedation Assessment in Critically Ill Adults

Author:

Devlin John W1,Fraser Gilles L2,Kanji Salmaan3,Riker Richard R4

Affiliation:

1. John W Devlin PharmD BCPS, Clinical Pharmacy Specialist, Surgery/Critical Care, Department of Pharmacy Services, Detroit Receiving Hospital and University Health Center, Detroit, MI

2. Gilles L Fraser PharmD FCCM, Associate Professor of Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT; Clinical Pharmacist in Critical Care, Maine Medical Center, Portland, ME

3. Salmaan Kanji PharmD, Critical Care Pharmacotherapy Fellow, College of Pharmacy and Allied Health Professions, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI

4. Richard R Riker MD FCCP, Assistant Chief, Department of Critical Care, Maine Medical Center

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To review methods for assessing sedation in critically ill adults, discuss their impact on patient outcomes, and provide recommendations for implementing these methods into clinical practice in the intensive care unit (ICU). DATA SOURCES: A computerized search of MEDLINE from 1980 through June 2000 and a manual search of abstracts presented at recent critical care meetings were performed. STUDY SELECTION AND DATA EXTRACTION: Sedation assessment tools that have been used to titrate therapy in adult, critically ill patients were identified. Special emphasis was placed on sedation assessment instruments that have been prospectively validated. Objective methods that have been used to assess sedation therapy were also identified. DATA SYNTHESIS: Twenty-three adult sedation assessment instruments were identified. Few scales have been prospectively evaluated for validity (n = 6) or reliability (n = 7). Other methods of sedation assessment were identified (e.g., bispectral index monitor); however, most of these methods have only been studied in small subsets of critically ill patients. CONCLUSIONS: Incorporation of sedation assessment into ICU clinical practice may improve patient care. These sedation assessment instruments must be further evaluated to determine their impact on quality of care and ICU length of stay.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical)

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