| Literature DB >> 30355550 |
Manikantan Shanmugham1, Lesley Strawderman1, Kari Babski-Reeves1, Linkan Bian1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Delayed or no response to impending patient safety-related calls, poor care provider experience, low job satisfaction, and adverse events are all unwanted outcomes of alarm fatigue. Nurses often cite increases in alarm-related workload as a reason for alarm fatigue, which is a major contributor to the aforementioned unwanted outcomes. Increased workload affects both the care provider and the patient. No studies to date have evaluated the workload while caring for patients and managing alarms simultaneously and related it to the primary measures of alarm fatigue-alarm response rate and care provider experience. Many studies have assessed the effect of modifying the default alarm setting; however, studies on the perceived workload under different alarm settings are limited.Entities:
Keywords: clinical alarms; fatigue; nursing; physiologic monitoring; workload
Year: 2018 PMID: 30355550 PMCID: PMC6231885 DOI: 10.2196/11704
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Hum Factors ISSN: 2292-9495
Demographic data.
| Variables | Statistics | |
| Age in years, mean (SD) | 40.6 (9.9) | |
| Female | 23 (77) | |
| Male | 7 (23) | |
| Registered nurse | 10 (33) | |
| Nurse assistants (CNAsa) | 20 (67) | |
| None | 0 | |
| Less than 1 year | 1 (3) | |
| 1-3 years | 3 (10) | |
| 3-5 years | 9 (30) | |
| More than 5 years | 17 (57) | |
| Yes | 10 (33) | |
| No | 20 (67) | |
| Yes | 5 (17) | |
| No | 14 (47) | |
| Yes | 7 (23) | |
| No | 8 (27) | |
| CNAsa or other | 20 (67) | |
| Associates | 4 (13) | |
| Bachelors | 4 (13) | |
| Graduate and more | 2 (7) | |
| Yes | 5 (17) | |
| No | 6 (20) | |
aCNA: certified nursing assistant.
bPercentage does not equal 100 due to missing responses.
Alarm sequence.
| Serial no. | Default setting of the alarm (as released to the hospital floor); total number of alarms=18 | Modified to patient condition using | ||
| Alarm type | Intervention type | Alarm type | Intervention type | |
| 1 | Advisory | Nonactionable | Removeda | Removeda |
| 2 | Warning | Actionable | Warning | Actionable |
| 3 | System message | Nonactionable | Removeda | Removeda |
| 4 | Actionable | Actionable | Actionable | Actionable |
| 5 | Warning | Actionable | Warning | Actionable |
| 6 | System message | Nonactionable | Removeda | Removeda |
| 7 | Warning | Actionable | Warning | Actionable |
| 8 | Actionable | Actionable | Actionable | Actionable |
| 9 | Warning | Actionable | Warning | Actionable |
| 10 | System message | Nonactionable | System message | Nonactionable |
| 11 | System message | Nonactionable | Removeda | Removeda |
| 12 | Advisory | Nonactionable | Removeda | Removeda |
| 13 | Warning | Actionable | Warning | Actionable |
| 14 | Advisory | Nonactionable | Advisory | Nonactionable |
| 15 | Actionable | Actionable | Actionable | Actionable |
| 16 | System message | Nonactionable | System message | Nonactionable |
| 17 | Advisory | Nonactionable | Removeda | Removeda |
| 18 | Advisory | Nonactionable | Removeda | Removeda |
aThese alarms were not presented. Removed alarms: 5 premature ventricular contraction, 1 missed beat, and 1 noninvasive blood pressure.
Descriptive statistics for dependent variables.
| Alarm setting and variable | Mean (SD) | Total | |
| Percentage of alarms addressed | 68.9 (10.5) | 30 | |
| Error rate | 9.5 (6.0) | 30 | |
| Care provider experiencea | 2.6 (1.3) | 30 | |
| Overall satisfactiona | 2.5 (0.9) | 30 | |
| Percentage of alarms addressed | 86.7 (7.6) | 30 | |
| Error rate | 2.6 (4.5) | 30 | |
| Care provider experiencea | 3.8 (0.8) | 30 | |
| Overall satisfactiona | 4.3 (0.6) | 30 | |
aMeasured on 5-point Likert scale of 1-5 (1=very dissatisfied; 5=very satisfied).
Figure 1Subscale comparison chart for different alarm settings.