| Literature DB >> 30667409 |
Vineet M Arora1, Nolan Machado2, Samantha L Anderson3, Nimit Desai3, William Marsack3, Stephenie Blossomgame3, Ambrosio Tuvilleja3, Jacqueline Ramos3, Mary Ann Francisco3, Cynthia LaFond4, Edward Ky Leung4, Andres Valencia3, Shannon K Martin3, David O Meltzer3, Jeanne M Farnan3, Jay Balachandran5, Kristen L Knutson6, Babak Mokhlesi3.
Abstract
We created Sleep for Inpatients: Empowering Staff to Act (SIESTA), which combines electronic "nudges" to forgo nocturnal vitals and medications with interprofessional education on improving patient sleep. In one "SIESTAenhanced unit," nurses received coaching and integrated SIESTA into daily huddles; a standard unit did not. Six months pre- and post-SIESTA, sleep-friendly orders rose in both units (foregoing vital signs: SIESTA unit, 4% to 34%; standard, 3% to 22%, P < .001 both; sleeppromoting VTE prophylaxis: SIESTA, 15% to 42%; standard, 12% to 28%, P < .001 both). In the SIESTAenhanced unit, nighttime room entries dropped by 44% (-6.3 disruptions/room, P < .001), and patients were more likely to report no disruptions for nighttime vital signs (70% vs 41%, P = .05) or medications (84% vs 57%, P = .031) than those in the standard unit. The standard unit was not changed. Although sleep-friendly orders were adopted in both units, a unit-based nursing empowerment approach was associated with fewer nighttime room entries and improved patient experience.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30667409 DOI: 10.12788/jhm.3091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hosp Med ISSN: 1553-5592 Impact factor: 2.960