Annmarie Hosie1, Meera Agar2, Elizabeth Lobb3, Patricia M Davidson4, Jane Phillips5. 1. The University of Notre Dame Australia, School of Nursing, 160 Oxford St , Darlinghurst, NSW 2010, Australia. Electronic address: annmarie.hosie1@my.nd.edu.au. 2. Braeside Hospital, HammondCare, Department of Palliative Care, 340 Prairie Vale Rd., Prairiewood, NSW 2176, Australia; ImPaCCT: Improving Palliative Care through Clinical Trials (New South Wales Palliative Care Clinical Trials Group), South Western Sydney Clinical School, University of New South Wales, Faculty of Medicine, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia; Flinders University, Palliative and Supportive Services, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia. 3. ImPaCCT: Improving Palliative Care through Clinical Trials (New South Wales Palliative Care Clinical Trials Group), South Western Sydney Clinical School, University of New South Wales, Faculty of Medicine, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia; Calvary Health Care Sydney, Palliative Care Department, 91-111 Rocky Point Rd., Kogarah, NSW, Australia; Cunningham Centre for Palliative Care, Sacred Heart Hospice, St Vincent's Health Network, 170 Darlinghurst St, Darlinghurst, 2010 NSW, Australia. 4. ImPaCCT: Improving Palliative Care through Clinical Trials (New South Wales Palliative Care Clinical Trials Group), South Western Sydney Clinical School, University of New South Wales, Faculty of Medicine, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia; University of Technology, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health, Level 7, Building 10, Jones Street, Broadway, NSW 2007, Australia. 5. The University of Notre Dame Australia, School of Nursing, 160 Oxford St , Darlinghurst, NSW 2010, Australia; ImPaCCT: Improving Palliative Care through Clinical Trials (New South Wales Palliative Care Clinical Trials Group), South Western Sydney Clinical School, University of New South Wales, Faculty of Medicine, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia; Cunningham Centre for Palliative Care, Sacred Heart Hospice, St Vincent's Health Network, 170 Darlinghurst St, Darlinghurst, 2010 NSW, Australia.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Delirium is prevalent in palliative care inpatient settings and management is often challenging. Despite nurses' integral patient care role, little is known about palliative care nurses' capacity to recognise, assess and respond to patients' delirium symptoms. OBJECTIVE: To explore the experiences, views and practices of inpatient palliative care nurses in delirium recognition and assessment. SETTINGS AND PARTICIPANTS: 30 nurses from nine Australian specialist palliative care inpatient services. DESIGN AND METHODS: Critical incident technique (CIT) guided a series of semi-structured interviews. Prior to interviews participants were given a vignette of a palliative care inpatient with an unrecognised hypoactive delirium, to prompt their recollection and recounting of a similar clinical incident. Clearly recalled and described incidents were analysed using thematic content analysis. FINDINGS: 20 of 30 participants recalled and described 28 relevant delirium incidents. Two themes and six sub-themes provide a general description of participants' experiences, views and practice in delirium recognition and assessment. Participants experience distress related to caring for patients with delirium and express compassion and empathy for delirious patients. Enhancing their delirium knowledge, strengthening collaborative multidisciplinary team relationships and better communication are important supports. Some participants, usually those in advance practice roles, describe more comprehensive assessment capabilities that incorporate clinical expertise with whole person awareness, yet systematic and structured delirium screening and assessment processes and application of the delirium diagnosis criteria are largely missing. Use of ambiguous terminology to describe delirium symptoms contributes to ineffective practice. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this study expands our understanding of how palliative care nurses' capacity to recognise and assess patients' delirium symptoms in the inpatient setting could be strengthened.
BACKGROUND:Delirium is prevalent in palliative care inpatient settings and management is often challenging. Despite nurses' integral patient care role, little is known about palliative care nurses' capacity to recognise, assess and respond to patients' delirium symptoms. OBJECTIVE: To explore the experiences, views and practices of inpatient palliative care nurses in delirium recognition and assessment. SETTINGS AND PARTICIPANTS: 30 nurses from nine Australian specialist palliative care inpatient services. DESIGN AND METHODS: Critical incident technique (CIT) guided a series of semi-structured interviews. Prior to interviews participants were given a vignette of a palliative care inpatient with an unrecognised hypoactive delirium, to prompt their recollection and recounting of a similar clinical incident. Clearly recalled and described incidents were analysed using thematic content analysis. FINDINGS: 20 of 30 participants recalled and described 28 relevant delirium incidents. Two themes and six sub-themes provide a general description of participants' experiences, views and practice in delirium recognition and assessment. Participants experience distress related to caring for patients with delirium and express compassion and empathy for delirious patients. Enhancing their delirium knowledge, strengthening collaborative multidisciplinary team relationships and better communication are important supports. Some participants, usually those in advance practice roles, describe more comprehensive assessment capabilities that incorporate clinical expertise with whole person awareness, yet systematic and structured delirium screening and assessment processes and application of the delirium diagnosis criteria are largely missing. Use of ambiguous terminology to describe delirium symptoms contributes to ineffective practice. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this study expands our understanding of how palliative care nurses' capacity to recognise and assess patients' delirium symptoms in the inpatient setting could be strengthened.
Authors: Melinda R Steis; Liza Behrens; Elise M Colancecco; Jacqueline Mogle; Paula M Mulhall; Nikki L Hill; Donna M Fick; Ann M Kolankowski Journal: Ann Longterm Care Date: 2015-10-28
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Authors: Federico Coccolini; Francesco Corradi; Massimo Sartelli; Raul Coimbra; Igor A Kryvoruchko; Ari Leppaniemi; Krstina Doklestic; Elena Bignami; Giandomenico Biancofiore; Miklosh Bala; Ceresoli Marco; Dimitris Damaskos; Walt L Biffl; Paola Fugazzola; Domenico Santonastaso; Vanni Agnoletti; Catia Sbarbaro; Mirco Nacoti; Timothy C Hardcastle; Diego Mariani; Belinda De Simone; Matti Tolonen; Chad Ball; Mauro Podda; Isidoro Di Carlo; Salomone Di Saverio; Pradeep Navsaria; Luigi Bonavina; Fikri Abu-Zidan; Kjetil Soreide; Gustavo P Fraga; Vanessa Henriques Carvalho; Sergio Faria Batista; Andreas Hecker; Alessandro Cucchetti; Giorgio Ercolani; Dario Tartaglia; Joseph M Galante; Imtiaz Wani; Hayato Kurihara; Edward Tan; Andrey Litvin; Rita Maria Melotti; Gabriele Sganga; Tamara Zoro; Alessandro Isirdi; Nicola De'Angelis; Dieter G Weber; Adrien M Hodonou; Richard tenBroek; Dario Parini; Jim Khan; Giovanni Sbrana; Carlo Coniglio; Antonino Giarratano; Angelo Gratarola; Claudia Zaghi; Oreste Romeo; Michael Kelly; Francesco Forfori; Massimo Chiarugi; Ernest E Moore; Fausto Catena; Manu L N G Malbrain Journal: World J Emerg Surg Date: 2022-09-21 Impact factor: 8.165