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Effectiveness of implementing a wake up and breathe program on sedation and delirium in the ICU

Authors :
William F. Fadel
Mark O. Farber
E. Wesley Ely
Jason Tricker
Babar A. Khan
Malaz Boustani
W. Graham Carlos
Siu L. Hui
Noll L. Campbell
Source :
Critical care medicine. 42(12)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Mechanically ventilated critically ill patients receive significant amounts of sedatives and analgesics that increase their risk of developing coma and delirium. We evaluated the impact of a "Wake-up and Breathe Protocol" at our local ICU on sedation and delirium.A pre/post implementation study design.A 22-bed mixed surgical and medical ICU.Seven hundred two consecutive mechanically ventilated ICU patients from June 2010 to January 2013.Implementation of daily paired spontaneous awakening trials (daily sedation vacation plus spontaneous breathing trials) as a quality improvement project.After implementation of our program, there was an increase in the mean Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale scores on weekdays of 0.88 (p0.0001) and an increase in the mean Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale scores on weekends of 1.21 (p0.0001). After adjusting for age, race, gender, severity of illness, primary diagnosis, and ICU, the incidence and prevalence of delirium did not change post implementation of the protocol (incidence: 23% pre vs 19.6% post; p = 0.40; prevalence: 66.7% pre vs 55.3% post; p = 0.06). The combined prevalence of delirium/coma decreased from 90.8% pre protocol implementation to 85% postimplementation (odds ratio, 0.505; 95% CI, 0.299-0.853; p = 0.01).Implementing a "Wake Up and Breathe Program" resulted in reduced sedation among critically ill mechanically ventilated patients but did not change the incidence or prevalence of delirium.

Details

ISSN :
15300293
Volume :
42
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Critical care medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b7f803870f05275eccc2f949c080c67e