A Perioperative Intervention to Prevent and Treat Emergence Delirium at a Veterans Affairs Medical Center

Author:

Taylor Matthew1ORCID,Pileggi William2,Boland Michael2,Boudreaux-Kelly Monique2ORCID,Julian David3,Beckstead Amanda4

Affiliation:

1. Patient Safety Authority

2. VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System

3. VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System; University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Altoona

4. University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Altoona

Abstract

Emergence delirium (ED) is a temporary condition associated with a patient awakening from an anesthetic and/or adjunct agent (e.g., sedatives and analgesics). During the condition, patients risk harming themselves or staff by engaging in dangerous behavior, which may include thrashing, kicking, punching, and attempting to exit the bed/table. A multidisciplinary team at Veterans Affairs Pittsburgh Healthcare System (VAPHS) developed and implemented a multicomponent intervention to reduce the severity and occurrence of ED. The intervention consists of a training component and 21 clinical components. The 21 clinical components are implemented on a patient-by-patient basis and include routine screening for risk factors, enhanced communication among staff, adjusting the environment, following a specific medication strategy, and application of manual restraint (hands-on). The authors provide 15 online Supplemental Materials (S1–S15) to promote replication of the intervention. To our knowledge, this is the first manuscript that describes this type of multicomponent intervention in sufficient detail to allow others to replicate it. Following implementation of the intervention at VAPHS, perioperative staff reported that they observed a substantial reduction in the occurrence and severity of ED, ED-related patient and staff injuries, and ED-related loss of intravenous access and airway patency. Despite staff’s reported success of the intervention, rigorous research is needed to evaluate the efficacy of the intervention.

Publisher

Patient Safety Authority

Subject

General Medicine

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