We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Minimising alarm pressure on a single room NICU through automated withdrawal of resolved alarms.
- Authors
Broer, Shole D. L.; Cramer, Sophie J. E.; Tan, Ratna N. G. B.; Witlox, Ruben S. G. M.
- Abstract
Aim: In 2017, the Leiden University Medical Centre implemented a secondary alarm system using handheld devices to ensure accurate patient monitoring on the single room NICU. Initially, alarms remained active on the handheld devices until one of the caregivers in the alarm chain accepted the alarm. In 2020, a bidirectional communication protocol (BCP) was implemented, enabling automated withdrawal of resolved alarms. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of this implementation on the alarm duration and pressure. Methods: Data of all alarms of the secondary alarm chain in the 90 days before and after the implementation were analysed and compared between both periods. Results: Following the implementation of the BCP, 60% of the alarms were withdrawn before the designated nurse responded. Despite a significant higher total number of alarms, the median alarm duration decreased from 9 (7–14) to 6 (4–10) s, the acceptance rate of the designated nurse increased from 93% to 95% and the median time of alarm sounding per phone per hour significantly decreased from 71 (51–101) to 51 (35–69) s following implementation of the BCP. Conclusion: This study showed that automated withdrawal of resolved alarms significantly reduces alarm duration and pressure on a NICU.
- Subjects
RIJKSUNIVERSITEIT te Leiden; MONITOR alarms (Medicine); NEONATAL intensive care units; ALARMS
- Publication
Acta Paediatrica, 2024, Vol 113, Issue 2, p206
- ISSN
0803-5253
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/apa.17029