| Literature DB >> 34782986 |
Abdullah A O Alhaidari1,2, Kyriakos P Matsis3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To assess the clinical implementation and barriers to completing the 4AT for delirium in general medical and geriatric patients over 75 years upon admission to Wellington and Kenepuru Hospitals during the first eight months of 2017, 2018 and 2019.Entities:
Keywords: Delirium; Guideline adherence; Hospitals; Implementation science; New Zealand
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34782986 PMCID: PMC8860947 DOI: 10.1007/s41999-021-00582-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Geriatr Med ISSN: 1878-7649 Impact factor: 1.710
Population demographics for the quantitative study
| Admissions, | Wellington hospital | Kenepuru hospital | Both hospitals | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age on admission (years) | ||||||
| Mean age ± SD (Range) | 84 ± 5.9 (75–109) | 85 ± 5.8 (75–108) | 84 ± 5.9 (75–109) | |||
| Sex, | ||||||
| Female | 3568 | (57.4%) | 972 | (61.4%) | 4540 | (58.2%) |
| Male | 2649 | (42.6%) | 610 | (38.6%) | 3259 | (41.8%) |
| Ethnicity, | ||||||
| New Zealand European | 3842 | (61.8%) | 1057 | (66.8%) | 4899 | (62.8%) |
| Other European | 1226 | (19.7%) | 302 | (19.1%) | 1528 | (19.6%) |
| New Zealand Maori | 209 | (3.4%) | 45 | (2.8%) | 254 | (3.3%) |
| Other | 940 | (15.1%) | 178 | (11.3%) | 1118 | (14.3%) |
SD Standard deviation
Doctors’ adherence to the 4AT
| 4ATs completed, | 2017a | 2018a | 2019a | Total | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wellington Hospital | 1662 | (79.8%) | 1618 | (82.9%) | 1796 | (82.3%) | 5076 | (81.6%) | |
| Kenepuru Hospital | 516 | (89.1%) | 476 | (88.3%) | 424 | (91.4%) | 1416 | (89.5%) | |
| Both Hospitals | 2178 | (81.8%) | 2094 | (84.1%) | 2220 | (83.9%) | 6492 | (83.2%) | |
aFigures represent 4ATs completed during the first eight months of the years 2017, 2018 and 2019.
Sample demographics for the qualitative study
| Admissions, | Wellington hospital | Kenepuru hospital | Both hospitals | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age on admission (years) | ||||||
| Mean age ± SD (Range) | 84 ± 5.8 (75–102) | 84 ± 6.2 (75–108) | 84 ± 5.9 (75–108) | |||
| Sex, | ||||||
| Female | 424 | (56%) | 69 | (58.5%) | 493 | (56.3%) |
| Male | 333 | (44%) | 49 | (41.5%) | 382 | (43.7%) |
| Ethnicity, | ||||||
| New Zealand European | 337 | (44.5%) | 56 | (47.5%) | 393 | (44.9%) |
| Other European | 132 | (17.4%) | 22 | (18.6%) | 154 | (17.6%) |
| New Zealand Maori | 24 | (3.2%) | 6 | (5.1%) | 30 | (3.4%) |
| Other | 264 | (34.9%) | 34 | (28.8%) | 298 | (34.1%) |
SD Standard deviation
Responding doctors demographics
| Doctors, | Wellington Hospital | Kenepuru Hospital | Both hospitalsa | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 172 | 72 | 211 | ||||
| Position, | ||||||
| Registrar | 116 | (67%) | 37 | (51%) | 132 | (63%) |
| House Surgeon | 47 | (27%) | 33 | (46%) | 68 | (32%) |
| Senior Medical Officer | 5 | (3%) | 1 | (1%) | 6 | (3%) |
| Trainee Intern | 2 | (1%) | 0 | (0%) | 2 | (1%) |
| Unknown | 2 | (1%) | 1 | (1%) | 3 | (1%) |
| Sex, | ||||||
| Female | 91 | (53%) | 34 | (47%) | 109 | (52%) |
| Male | 75 | (44%) | 30 | (42%) | 89 | (42%) |
| Unknown | 6 | (3%) | 8 | (11%) | 13 | (6%) |
aEach of the 33 doctors who worked in the same position in both hospitals was not counted more than once
Main barriers to completing the 4AT with representative quotes
| Main categories | Subcategories | Representative quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Reduced alertness | Drowsy Reduced GCS due to severe illness Not conscious enough Too drowsy to assess Reduced level of consciousness prevents screen | |
| Communication barriers | Language barrier | Too difficult with language barrier English second language Language barrier, (…) speaks Samoan and I unfortunately do not Unable to converse with patient no translator Poor English daughter translating Mrs (…) English is limited and unfair assessment |
| Aphasia and dysarthria | Difficulty answering questions due to dysphasia post stroke Pt (patient) averbal with severe dementia BG (background) Difficult as patient dysarthric | |
| Deafness | Very deaf Deaf and Mute | |
| Non-specific | Unable to communicate with patient | |
| Pre-existing cognitive disorders | Known mild cognitive impairment Known Alzheimer’s Established dementia Known advanced dementia Known cognitive impairment. MOCA 15/30 on 17/6/19 Known Dementia and confusion at baseline according to family Cognitive impairment puts patient at risk of delirium in hospital | |
| Unstructured delirium assessments | [Test] not formally done; but [patient] not delirious Appeared appropriate and not delirious Clinically was felt to have cognitive clouding Patient clearly articulates delirium Not clinically delirious Delirium is confirmed clinically No change from previous admission Not confused per family Not done no concerns about cogitation [ Alert, appropriate, clear history, not delirious | |
| Prioritising patients' wellness and comfort | Critical illness | Critically unwell Unwell in resus (Resuscitation room) Active bleeding undergoing resuscitation Quite SOB (short of breath) In ED resuscitation (room), struggling to talk Too unwell with resp (respiratory) symptoms |
| Symptomatic | Tearful and upset Tremulous and anxious Pt too distressed with pain and nausea Currently vomiting, not clinically appropriate Patient too fatigued | |
| End of life | Terminal illness Possibly dying Palliative care approach Sensitive discussion around end-of-life Just completed discussions around palliative care and resus | |
| Sleep | (…) was keen to get some sleep Currently asleep. Will attempt later Woken briefly for review |