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Perceived barriers to the use of sedation protocols and daily sedation interruption: a multidisciplinary survey
- Source :
- Journal of critical care. 24(1)
- Publication Year :
- 2007
-
Abstract
- Background Although use of sedation protocols and daily sedation interruption (DSI) improve outcome, their current use and barriers affecting their use are unclear. Methods We designed a multidisciplinary, Web-based survey to determine current use of sedation protocols and DSI and the perceived barriers to each, and administered it to members of the Society of Critical Care Medicine. Results The 904 responders were physicians (60%), nurses (14%), or pharmacists (12%); 45% worked in a university hospital. Of 64% having a sedation protocol, 78% used it for ≥50% of ventilated patients. Reasons for lack of protocol use included no physician order (35%), lack of nursing support (11%), and a fear of oversedation (7%). Daily sedation interruption was used by only 40%. Barriers to DSI included lack of nursing acceptance (22%), concern about risk of patient-initiated device removal (19%), and inducement of either respiratory compromise (26%) or patient discomfort (13%). Clinicians who prefer propofol were more likely to use DSI than those who prefer benzodiazepines (55% vs 40, P Conclusions Current intensive care unit sedation practices are heterogeneous, and the barriers preventing the use of both sedation protocols and DSI are numerous. These barriers should be addressed on an institutional basis to boost the use of these evidence-based practices.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Evidence-based practice
Critical Care
Attitude of Health Personnel
Sedation
medicine.medical_treatment
MEDLINE
Conscious Sedation
Nursing Staff, Hospital
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Pharmacists
law.invention
Clinical Protocols
law
Multidisciplinary approach
Surveys and Questionnaires
Medical Staff, Hospital
Medicine
Humans
Practice Patterns, Physicians'
Protocol (science)
Mechanical ventilation
Patient Care Team
Health Services Needs and Demand
business.industry
Patient Selection
medicine.disease
Intensive care unit
Respiration, Artificial
United States
Evidence-Based Practice
Emergency medicine
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Medical emergency
Guideline Adherence
medicine.symptom
Diffusion of Innovation
Safety
business
Propofol
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15578615
- Volume :
- 24
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of critical care
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b78ecc5cee0b02437419ff07f6c97511