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- Title
Defining patient deterioration through acute care and intensive care nurses' perspectives.
- Authors
Lavoie, Patrick; Pepin, Jacinthe; Alderson, Marie
- Abstract
ABSTRACT Aim To explore the variations between acute care and intensive care nurses' understanding of patient deterioration according to their use of this term in published literature. Background Evidence suggests that nurses on wards do not always recognize and act upon patient deterioration appropriately. Even if resources exist to call for intensive care nurses' help, acute care nurses use them infrequently and the problem of unattended patient deterioration remains. Design Dimensional analysis was used as a framework to analyze papers retrieved in a nursing-focused database. Method A thematic analysis of 34 papers (2002-2012) depicting acute care and intensive care unit nurses' perspectives on patient deterioration was conducted. Findings No explicit definition of patient deterioration was retrieved in the papers. There are variations between acute care and intensive care unit nurses' accounts of this concept, particularly regarding the validity of patient deterioration indicators. Contextual factors, processes and consequences are also explored. Conclusions From the perspectives of acute care and intensive care nurses, patient deterioration can be defined as an evolving, predictable and symptomatic process of worsening physiology towards critical illness. Contextual factors relating to acute care units (ACU) appear as barriers to optimal care of the deteriorating patient. This work can be considered as a first effort in modelling the concept of patient deterioration, which could be specific to ACU. Relevance to clinical practice The findings suggest that it might be relevant to include subjective indicators of patient deterioration in track and trigger systems and educational efforts. Contextual factors impacting care for the deteriorating patient could be addressed in further attempts to deal with this issue.
- Subjects
CINAHL database; CONCEPTUAL structures; CRITICAL care medicine; HEALTH status indicators; INTENSIVE care nursing; NURSING assessment; NURSING specialties; PATIENT monitoring; RESEARCH funding; VITAL signs; SYSTEMATIC reviews; DECISION making in clinical medicine; THEMATIC analysis; SEVERITY of illness index
- Publication
Nursing in Critical Care, 2016, Vol 21, Issue 2, p68
- ISSN
1362-1017
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/nicc.12114