4.6 Article

Delirium the under-recognised syndrome: survey of healthcare professionals' awareness and practice in the intensive care units

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING
Volume 26, Issue 5-6, Pages 813-824

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jocn.13517

Keywords

delirium; healthcare professionals' awareness; intensive care units; management; protocol; screening

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Aims and objectivesTo survey intensive care unit healthcare professionals' awareness and practice related to delirium. BackgroundDespite the current evidence revealing the risks linked to delirium and advances in practice guidelines promoting delirium assessment, healthcare professionals show little sensitivity towards delirium and evident training needs. DesignThe study had a cross-sectional survey design. MethodsA sample of 168 intensive care unit healthcare professionals including nurses and physicians completed a semistructured questionnaire to survey their awareness, screening and management of delirium in intensive care units. The survey took place at 11 intensive care units from academic (university) and nonacademic (nonuniversity) governmental hospitals in Mansoura, Egypt. ResultsThe mean score of delirium awareness was 644140 among intensive care unit healthcare professionals. Awareness of delirium was significantly lower when definition of delirium was not provided, among diploma nurses compared to bachelor degree nurses and physicians, among those who did not attend any workshop/lecture or read an article related to delirium and lastly, those who work in an intensive care unit when <50% of patients develop delirium. The survey found that only 268% of the healthcare professionals screen for delirium on a routine basis, and 143% reported attending workshops or lectures or reading an article related to delirium in the last year. In screening delirium, healthcare professionals did not use any tools, nor did they follow adopted protocols or guidelines to manage delirium. To manage delirium, 524% of the participants reported using sedatives, 369% used no drugs, and 107% reported using antipsychotics (primarily haloperidol). ConclusionIntensive care unit healthcare professionals do not have adequate training or routine screening of delirium. There is an evident absence of using standardised tools or adapting protocols to monitor and manage delirium. Relevance to clinical practiceThis study has the potentials to shed some lights on the variables that might explain the problem of underdiagnosing delirium by healthcare professionals at intensive care units in Mansoura.

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