A multifaceted educational intervention to prevent delirium in older inpatients: A before and after study
Systematically targeting modifiable risk factors for delirium may reduce its incidence. However, research interventions have not become part of routine clinical practice. Particular approaches to the education of clinical staff may improve their practice and patient outcomes. To evaluate the effecti...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of nursing studies 2014-07, Vol.51 (7), p.974-982 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Systematically targeting modifiable risk factors for delirium may reduce its incidence. However, research interventions have not become part of routine clinical practice. Particular approaches to the education of clinical staff may improve their practice and patient outcomes.
To evaluate the effectiveness of a multifaceted educational program in preventing delirium in hospitalised older patients and improving staff practice, knowledge and confidence.
A before and after study.
A 22-bed general medical ward of a district hospital in Sydney, Australia.
Patients were aged 65 years and over and not delirious upon admission. Of 568 eligible patients, 129 were recruited pre-intervention (3 withdrew initial consent) and 129 patients post-intervention.
Prior to the intervention, in order to establish a baseline, patients were assessed early after admission and again at discharge. The intervention was a one-hour lecture on delirium focusing on prevention for medical and nursing staff followed by weekly interactive tutorials with delirium resource staff and ward modifications. Following the initial education session, data were gathered in a second group of medical ward patients at the same time-points to ascertain the effectiveness of the intervention. Pre and post-intervention data were analysed to determine change in staff objective knowledge and self-ratings of confidence and clinical practice in relation to delirium. The main outcome measures were incident delirium and change in staff practice, confidence and knowledge.
The mean age of patients was 81. The pre and post-intervention groups were comparable, aside from greater co morbidity in the pre-intervention group (F(1, 253)=9.20, p=0.003). Post-intervention there was a significant reduction in incident delirium (19% vs. 10.1%, X2=4.14, p=0.042), and improved function on discharge (mean improvement 5.3 points, p |
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ISSN: | 0020-7489 1873-491X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2013.11.005 |