Literature DB >> 24847936

Video methods for evaluating physiologic monitor alarms and alarm responses.

Christopher P Bonafide, Miriam Zander, Christian Sarkis Graham, Christine M Weirich Paine, Whitney Rock, Andrew Rich, Kathryn E Roberts, Margaret Fortino, Vinay M Nadkarni, Richard Lin, Ron Keren.   

Abstract

False physiologic monitor alarms are extremely common in the hospital environment. High false alarm rates have the potential to lead to alarm fatigue, leading nurses to delay their responses to alarms, ignore alarms, or disable them entirely. Recent evidence from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and The Joint Commission has demonstrated a link between alarm fatigue and patient deaths. Yet, very little scientific effort has focused on the rigorous quantitative measurement of alarms and responses in the hospital setting. We developed a system using multiple temporarily mounted, minimally obtrusive video cameras in hospitalized patients' rooms to characterize physiologic monitor alarms and nurse responses as a proxy for alarm fatigue. This allowed us to efficiently categorize each alarm's cause, technical validity, actionable characteristics, and determine the nurse's response time. We describe and illustrate the methods we used to acquire the video, synchronize and process the video, manage the large digital files, integrate the video with data from the physiologic monitor alarm network, archive the video to secure servers, and perform expert review and annotation using alarm "bookmarks." We discuss the technical and logistical challenges we encountered, including the root causes of hardware failures as well as issues with consent, confidentiality, protection of the video from litigation, and Hawthorne-like effects. The description of this video method may be useful to multidisciplinary teams interested in evaluating physiologic monitor alarms and alarm responses to better characterize alarm fatigue and other patient safety issues in clinical settings.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24847936     DOI: 10.2345/0899-8205-48.3.220

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomed Instrum Technol        ISSN: 0899-8205


  8 in total

1.  Association between exposure to nonactionable physiologic monitor alarms and response time in a children's hospital.

Authors:  Christopher P Bonafide; Richard Lin; Miriam Zander; Christian Sarkis Graham; Christine W Paine; Whitney Rock; Andrew Rich; Kathryn E Roberts; Margaret Fortino; Vinay M Nadkarni; A Russell Localio; Ron Keren
Journal:  J Hosp Med       Date:  2015-04-15       Impact factor: 2.960

2.  Real alerts and artifact classification in archived multi-signal vital sign monitoring data: implications for mining big data.

Authors:  Marilyn Hravnak; Lujie Chen; Artur Dubrawski; Eliezer Bose; Gilles Clermont; Michael R Pinsky
Journal:  J Clin Monit Comput       Date:  2015-10-05       Impact factor: 2.502

3.  Research: Acceptability, Feasibility, and Cost of Using Video to Evaluate Alarm Fatigue.

Authors:  Matt MacMurchy; Shannon Stemler; Mimi Zander; Christopher P Bonafide
Journal:  Biomed Instrum Technol       Date:  2017 Jan-Feb

4.  Video Analysis of Factors Associated With Response Time to Physiologic Monitor Alarms in a Children's Hospital.

Authors:  Christopher P Bonafide; A Russell Localio; John H Holmes; Vinay M Nadkarni; Shannon Stemler; Matthew MacMurchy; Miriam Zander; Kathryn E Roberts; Richard Lin; Ron Keren
Journal:  JAMA Pediatr       Date:  2017-06-01       Impact factor: 16.193

5.  Optimising paediatric afferent component early warning systems: a hermeneutic systematic literature review and model development.

Authors:  Nina Jacob; Yvonne Moriarty; Amy Lloyd; Mala Mann; Lyvonne N Tume; Gerri Sefton; Colin Powell; Damian Roland; Robert Trubey; Kerenza Hood; Davina Allen
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-11-14       Impact factor: 2.692

6.  Role of Large Clinical Datasets From Physiologic Monitors in Improving the Safety of Clinical Alarm Systems and Methodological Considerations: A Case From Philips Monitors.

Authors:  Azizeh Khaled Sowan; Charles Calhoun Reed; Nancy Staggers
Journal:  JMIR Hum Factors       Date:  2016-09-30

7.  The heuristics of nurse responsiveness to critical patient monitor and ventilator alarms in a private room neonatal intensive care unit.

Authors:  Rohan Joshi; Heidi van de Mortel; Loe Feijs; Peter Andriessen; Carola van Pul
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-10-05       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Addressing vital sign alarm fatigue using personalized alarm thresholds.

Authors:  Sarah Poole; Nigam Shah
Journal:  Pac Symp Biocomput       Date:  2018
  8 in total

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