Publisher Correction to: Discomfort improvement for critically ill patients using electronic relaxation devices: results of the cross‑over randomized controlled trial E‑CHOISIR (Electronic‑CHOIce of a System for Intensive care Relaxation)
Abstract Purpose To assess the impact of different electronic relaxation devices on common stressful patient symptoms experienced in intensive care unit (ICU). Methods Sixty critically ill patients were enrolled in four relaxation sessions using a randomized cross-over design: standard relaxation (T...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Critical care (London, England) England), 2022-09, Vol.26 (1), p.1-291, Article 291 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract Purpose To assess the impact of different electronic relaxation devices on common stressful patient symptoms experienced in intensive care unit (ICU). Methods Sixty critically ill patients were enrolled in four relaxation sessions using a randomized cross-over design: standard relaxation (TV/radio), music therapy (MUSIC-CARE©), and two virtual reality systems using either real motion pictures (DEEPSEN©) or synthetic motion pictures (HEALTHY-MIND©). The goal was to determine which device was the best to reduce overall patient discomfort intensity (0–10 Numeric Rating Scale (NRS); primary endpoint). Secondary endpoints were specific stressful symptoms (pain, anxiety, dyspnea, thirst, and lack of rest feeling) and stress response measured by Analgesia/Nociception Index (ANI). Multivariate mixed-effect analysis was used, taking into account patient characteristics and multiple measurements. Results Fifty patients followed the full research protocol, and ten patients did at least one research planned session of relaxation. HEALTHY-MIND© was associated with a significant decrease in overall discomfort, the primary endpoint (median NRS = 4[2–6] vs. 2[0–5]; p = 0.01, mixed-effect model), accompanied by a significant decrease in stress response (increase in ANI, secondary endpoint; p |
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ISSN: | 1364-8535 1364-8535 1366-609X 1466-609X |
DOI: | 10.1186/s13054-022-04169-9 |