| Literature DB >> 32308558 |
Elke Detroyer1,2, Annick Timmermans1,3, Dana Segers1,4, Geert Meyfroidt5, Jasperina Dubois3, Aimé Van Assche3, Etienne Joosten2, Koen Milisen1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist (ICDSC) demonstrates good psychometric characteristics in research settings. However, evidence about these characteristics in pragmatic ICU settings is inconsistent. This study evaluated psychometric properties and user-friendliness of the ICDSC when administered by ICU nurses in daily practice.Entities:
Keywords: Delirium; Intensive care delirium screening checklist; Psychometrics; Sensitivity and specificity; User-friendliness; Validation studies
Year: 2020 PMID: 32308558 PMCID: PMC7149913 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-020-00415-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
User-friendliness of the ICDSC (n = 34 bedside nurses of the ICU)
| Items | Entirely disagree, n (%) | Mainly disagree, n (%) | Mainly agree, n (%) | Entirely agree, n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clarity of content/concepts of the scale | ||||
| The concepts of the scale were clear to me | 0 (0) | 1 (2.9) | 16 (47.1) | 17 (50.0) |
| The concepts were compatible with the language used in practice | 1 (2.9) | 1 (2.9) | 13 (38.2) | 19 (55.9) |
| The way in which the observations are described is free of values and judgement | 0 (0) | 6 (17.6) | 11 (32.4) | 17 (50.0) |
| There was a clear difference between the possible answers | 0 (0) | 5 (14.7) | 15 (44.1) | 14 (41.2) |
| Nurses’ perception of their competence to fill out the scale | ||||
| I have sufficient knowledge from my training/experience to evaluate the observations on the scale | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 14 (41.2) | 20 (58.8) |
| I could quickly make a choice between the possible answers | 0 (0) | 4 (11.8) | 17 (50.0) | 13 (38.2) |
| I requested help from others because it was not clear to me what was being asked | 11 (32.4) | 12 (35.3) | 7 (20.6) | 4 (11.8) |
| The instructions on the form helped me in choosing the answers | 0 (0) | 1 (2.9) | 15 (44.1) | 18 (52.9) |
| Relevance/feasibility of the scale | ||||
| I found it a handy instrument to spot delirium symptoms | 0 (0) | 6 (17.6) | 21 (61.8) | 7 (20.6) |
| This instrument offered added value to my practice of nursing | 0 (0) | 14 (41.2) | 12 (35.3) | 8 (23.5) |
| Clarity of single ICDSC items | ||||
| Item 1 (altered level of consciousness) is clear to me | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 13 (38.2) | 21 (61.8) |
| Item 2 (inattention) is clear to me | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 12 (25.8) | 22 (64.7) |
| Item 3 (disorientation) is clear to me | 0 (0) | 1 (2.9) | 10 (29.4) | 23 (67.6) |
| Item 4 (hallucination, delusion, psychosis) is clear to me | 0 (0) | 1 (2.9) | 15 (44.1) | 18 (52.9) |
| Item 5 (psychomotor agitation or retardation) is clear to me | 0 (0) | 1 (2.9) | 13 (38.2) | 20 (58.8) |
| Item 6 (inappropriate speech or mood) is clear to me | 0 (0) | 4 (11.8) | 14 (41.2) | 16 (47.1) |
| Item 7 (sleep/wake cycle disturbance) is clear to me | 0 (0) | 1 (2.9) | 14 (41.2) | 19 (55.9) |
| Item 8 (symptom fluctuation) is clear to me | 0 (0) | 4 (11.8) | 13 (38.2) | 17 (50.0) |
Fig. 1Overview of the study sample in patients
Baseline data of included patients (n = 77)
| Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Age, median years (IQR) | 72 (13) |
| Sex, n (%) | |
| Female | 14 (18.2) |
| Male | 63 (81.8) |
| Marital status, n (%) | |
| Married | 59 (76.6) |
| Single | 2 (2.6) |
| Widowed | 13 (16.9) |
| Divorced | 3 (3.9) |
| Education level, n (%) | |
| Low (< 15 years) | 37 (48.0) |
| Moderate (15–18 years) | 23 (29.9) |
| High (> 18 years) | 17 (22.1) |
| Social living circumstances before admittance to the intensive care unit, n (%) | |
| At home | 75 (97.4) |
| Service flat | 1 (1.3) |
| Residential facilities | 1 (1.3) |
| Type of surgery, n (%) | |
| CABG | 44 (57.1) |
| Valve replacement | 15 (19.5) |
| Combination valve replacement and CABG | 12 (15.6) |
| Thorax surgery | 3 (3.9) |
| AAA | 3 (3.9) |
| Number of medications, median (IQR) | 4 (2.0) |
| Confirmed diagnosis of dementia, n (%) | 1 (1.3) |
Fig. 2ROC curve of the ICDSC scores compared with the CAM-ICU as reference standard. ROC: receiver operating characteristic; ICDSC: Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist; CAM-ICU: Confusion Assessment Method for the Intensive Care Unit; Sn: sensitivity; Sp: specificity
Diagnostic accuracy of the ICDSC administered by bedside nurses for the CAM-ICU (study nurses) as gold standard in 143 paired observations
| Instruments | Cutoff | Sensitivity | Specificity | PPV | NPV | Accuracy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive CAM-ICU | ||||||
| ICDSC | 2 | 90.5 (71–97) | 72.1 (64–79) | 35.8 (24–49) | 97.8 (92–99) | 74.8 (67–81) |
| 3 | 81.0 (60–92) | 80.3 (72–86) | 41.4 (28–57) | 96.1 (90–98) | 80.4 (73–86) | |
| 4 | 81.0 (60–92) | 87.7 (81–92) | 53.1 (36–69) | 96.4 (91–99) | 86.7 (80–91) | |
| 5 | 71.4 (50–86) | 93.4 (88–97) | 65.2 (45–81) | 95 (90–98) | 90.2 (84–94) | |
Pearson item-total correlation coefficients of the ICDSC (n = 77 patients; 507 test occasions)
| ICDSC items | Corrected item-total correlations | Total alpha if item is deleted |
|---|---|---|
| Item 1 “Altered level of consciousness” | 0.638 | 0.811 |
| Item 2 “Inattention” | 0.586 | 0.819 |
| Item 3 “Disorientation” | 0.588 | 0.819 |
| Item 4 “Hallucination, delusion, psychosis” | 0.507 | 0.829 |
| Item 5 “Psychomotor agitation or retardation” | 0.661 | 0.808 |
| Item 6 “Inappropriate speech or mood” | 0.575 | 0.822 |
| Item 7 “Sleep/wake cycle disturbance” | 0.469 | 0.837 |
| Item 8 “Symptom fluctuation” | 0.604 | 0.816 |