| Literature DB >> 27025940 |
Azizeh Khaled Sowan1, Albert Fajardo Tarriela, Tiffany Michelle Gomez, Charles Calhoun Reed, Kami Marie Rapp.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intensive care units (ICUs) are complex work environments where false alarms occur more frequently than on non-critical care units. The Joint Commission National Patient Safety Goal .06.01.01 targeted improving the safety of clinical alarm systems and required health care facilities to establish alarm systems safety as a hospital priority by July 2014. An important initial step toward this requirement is identifying ICU nurses' perceptions and common clinical practices toward clinical alarms, where little information is available.Entities:
Keywords: alarm fatigue; clinical alarms; critical care; nursing; physiologic monitors; survey
Year: 2015 PMID: 27025940 PMCID: PMC4797660 DOI: 10.2196/humanfactors.4196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Hum Factors ISSN: 2292-9495
Percentages of TCICU nurses who agreed or strongly agreed on clinical alarm survey statements compared with respondents of the 2011 HTF survey data.
| # | Statement | TCICU | HTF 2011 |
|
| 1 | Nuisance alarms disrupt patient care | 38 (98) | 4125 (71) | NAc |
| 2 | Nuisance alarms reduce trust in alarms and cause caregivers to inappropriately turn alarms off at times other than setup or procedural events | 38 (98) | 4133 (78) | NAc |
| 3 | Alarm sounds and/or visual displays of the current monitoring systems and devices should clearly differentiate the priority of alarm | 37 (95) | 4137 (91) | NAc |
| 4 | Alarm sounds and/or visual displays should be distinct based on the parameter or source (eg, device) | 37 (95) | 4130 (91) | NAc |
| 5 | Nuisance alarms occur frequently | 37 (95) | 4124 (77) | NAc |
| 6 | Smart alarms (eg, where multiple parameters, rate of change of parameters, and signal quality are automatically assessed in their entirety) would be effective to use for improving clinical response to important patient alarms | 31 (80) | 3783 (78) | .7 |
| 7 | Smart alarms (eg, where multiple parameters, rate of change of parameters, and signal quality are automatically assessed in their entirety) would be effective to use for reducing false alarms | 30 (78) | 3791 (78) | .9 |
| 8d | Unit layout does interfere with alarm recognition and management | 28 (73) | NA | NA |
| 9 | When a number of devices are used with a patient, it can be confusing to determine which device is in an alarm condition | 28 (73) | 3916 (51) | <.01e |
| 10 | Central alarm management staff responsible for receiving alarm messages and alerting appropriate staff is helpful | 24 (59) | 3890 (53) | .4 |
| 11 | Alarm integration and communication systems via pagers, cell phones, and other wireless devices are useful for improving alarms management and response | 23 (56) | 3786 (56) | .9 |
| 12 | Properly setting alarm parameters and alerts is overly complex in existing devices | 22 (56) | 4009 (21) | <.001e |
| 13 | Environmental background noise has interfered with alarm recognition | 21 (54) | 3919 (42) | .1 |
| 14f | The alarms used on my unit are adequate to alert staff of potential or actual changes in a patient’s condition | 20 (51) | 3978 (72) | <.001e |
| 15d | When a lethal alarm sounds, it is clearly and quickly recognized and immediate action is taken to address the alarm | 19 (49) | NA | NA |
| 16d | Nearly all alarms are actionable (requiring the nurse to respond and take an action) | 19 (49) | NA | NA |
| 17 | Clinical staff is sensitive to alarms and responds quickly | 13 (34) | 3935 (66) | <.001e |
| 18 | There have been frequent instances where alarms could not be heard and were missed | 12 (32) | 3999 (29) | .6 |
| 19f | The medical devices used on my unit all have distinct outputs (ie, sounds, repetition rates, visual displays) that allow users to identify the source of the alarm | 12 (32) | 3927 (70) | <.001e |
| 20f | There is a requirement in my unit to document that the alarms are set and are appropriate for each patient | 12 (29) | 3784 (71) | <.001e |
| 21f | Clinical policies and procedures regarding alarm management are effectively used in my unit | 8 (20) | 3772 (55) | <.001e |
| 22 | Newer monitoring systems (eg, <3 years old) have solved most of the previous problems we experienced with clinical alarms | 1 (2) | 3988 (29) | <.001e |
aThis “n” reflects only the participants who agreed/strongly agreed on each statement and not the total sample size. The total sample size was 39.
bThis “n” is the number of respondents who answered each statement and is not limited to those who agreed/strongly agreed on each statement, and was used to calculate Z test. These numbers are unpublished data and were obtained from the HTF. The total sample size of the 2011 HTF survey is 4278.
cNA= Not applicable. No Z scores were calculated for difference between the two studies on these statements because “n*p and n(1-p)” were less than 5.
dThese are the new statements that we added to our survey and were not available in the HTF survey. Therefore, no Z score was calculated.
eSignificant at P<.05.
fThese are the statements where the “floor/area of the hospital” or “institution” in the HTF clinical alarms survey were replaced with “unit”.
Categories, themes, and comments of the TCICU nurses’ narrative data (N=22).
| Categories and themes | Examples of comments | |
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| Theme 1: False alarms are very frequent and very distracting (12 nurses) | “too much alarms that distract care and patient sleep” |
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| “they signal for no reason even in an empty patient room” | |
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| “the continuous "bing" of the central monitor gives me a huge headache” | |
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| Theme 2: There is a tendency by nurses to ignore clinical alarms (5 nurses) | “the nuisance of the new cardiac monitors is so overwhelming you tend to ignore” |
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| “I have watched multiple nurses at the nursing desk listen to alarms sounding and not respond, very worrisome” | |
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| Theme 3: Alarms’ sounds and visual displays are not distinct based on the priority of the alarm, parameter, or the device (9 nurses) | “lethal alarms are not distinguishable than other alarms” |
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| “alarms’ sounds and visual displays sound and look alike for different vitals” | |
|
| Theme 4: The new cardiac monitors are very complex and not user friendly (4 nurses) | “newer cardiac monitors made it worst, they are just fancier” |
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| “cardiac monitors are too difficult to navigate, and takes away time to care for patient which is more important than figuring the monitor to function, they are FOREVER alarming” | |
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| “I am unable to correct false alarms easily” | |
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| “alarms will sound for false Vtachs with no way to silence or relearn” | |
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| “cardiac monitor can't recognize the waveform of SPO2, adjustment on wave height is necessary” | |
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| Theme 5: The lowest volume of the alarms is still very loud and distracts patient sleep (2 nurses) | “alarms are very loud within the room, even turning the volume down to the lowest level is still loud- keeps patients awake at night” |
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| “the new cardiac monitors have the same volume alarm for even the most trivial alarms that it sets a cry wolf mentality and could pose a dangerous situation in which an actual true alarm could be disregarded” | |
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| Theme 6: A central monitor watcher will not solve the problem (3 nurses) | “having a watcher might be unsafe, will relax the monitoring eyes/ears of a nurse as a another person is equally monitoring” |
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| “it will add to alarm fatigue, it would be easier for me to just go in the room and fix the problem than have someone constantly calling me” | |
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| Theme 7: Unreliable technology to integrate with alarms (3 nurses) | “CISCO phones and pagers sometimes don’t alert or receive any alarms even for emergencies, there are delays on them and they loose the signals in the elevators” |
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| Theme 8: Absence of alarm management and documentation policy (3 nurses) | “we need to reinforce that alarm parameters need to be changed specific to the patient” |
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| “there is no place in the medical record to document that alarms are individualized based on patient condition” | |
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| Theme 9: Unit layout may hinder response to alarms (2 nurses) | “although alarms are loud within the patient room, the E-shape unit makes the unit too large and resulted in alarms being unheard” |
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| “even within the same hallway a fatal alarm can be missed” | |
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| “with the big unit, we cannot see all patients in the central monitor unless adjustment is done” | |
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| Theme 10: Further training on monitoring devices is required (1 nurse) | “there is not enough time to train staff on the central monitor alarm” |
Ranking of TCICU nurses compared to respondents of the 2011 HTF clinical alarms survey on the importance of issues that affect response to alarms (1=most important, 9=least important).
| Items | Our ICU data (N=39) | HTF 2011 data (N=4276) | ||
| Meana | Rankingb | Meana | Rankingb | |
| Difficulty in identifying the source of an alarm | 2.94 | 1 | 4.61 | 2 |
| Difficulty in understanding the priority of an alarm | 3.06 | 2 | 4.64 | 3 |
| Difficulty in hearing alarms when they occur | 3.93 | 3 | 4.70 | 4 |
| Frequent false alarms, which lead to reduced attention or response to alarms when they occur | 4.15 | 4 | 4.21 | 1 |
| Inadequate staff to respond to alarms as they occur | 4.23 | 5 | 4.87 | 6 |
| Difficulty in setting alarms properly | 4.44 | 6 | 5.16 | 7 |
| Noise competition from nonclinical alarms and pages | 4.45 | 7 | 5.66 | 9 |
| Over-reliance on alarms to call attention to patient problems | 4.77 | 8 | 4.86 | 5 |
| Lack of training on alarm systems | 6.60 | 9 | 5.55 | 8 |
aMean rank of the item.
bRanking of the mean.
Figure 1Percentages of TCICU nurses who agreed/strongly agreed on the adequacy of the training received on bedside and central cardiac monitors (N=39).