Gaps in pain, agitation and delirium management in intensive care: Outputs from a nurse workshop
Significant improvements in our understanding of pain, agitation, and delirium management within the Intensive Care Unit have been made in recent years. International guidelines and implementation bundles have become more evidence-based, patient-centred, and provide clear recommendations on the best...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Intensive & critical care nursing 2018-10, Vol.48, p.52-60 |
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creator | Hermes, Carsten Acevedo-Nuevo, Maria Berry, Andrea Kjellgren, Thomas Negro, Alessandra Massarotto, Paola |
description | Significant improvements in our understanding of pain, agitation, and delirium management within the Intensive Care Unit have been made in recent years. International guidelines and implementation bundles have become more evidence-based, patient-centred, and provide clear recommendations on the best-practice management of critically ill patients.
However, the intensive care community has highlighted the need for higher-order evidence in several areas of pain, agitation and delirium research and studies suggest that a significant number of intensive care patients still receive outdated treatment as a consequence of inadequate guideline implementation. Where do the gaps exist in pain, agitation and delirium management, what are the barriers to guideline implementation and how can these problems be addressed to ensure patients receive optimised care?
As an international professional consensus exercise, a panel of seven European intensive care nurses convened to discuss how to address these questions and establish how the provision of pain, agitation and delirium management can be improved in the intensive care unit. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/j.iccn.2018.01.008 |
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However, the intensive care community has highlighted the need for higher-order evidence in several areas of pain, agitation and delirium research and studies suggest that a significant number of intensive care patients still receive outdated treatment as a consequence of inadequate guideline implementation. Where do the gaps exist in pain, agitation and delirium management, what are the barriers to guideline implementation and how can these problems be addressed to ensure patients receive optimised care?
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However, the intensive care community has highlighted the need for higher-order evidence in several areas of pain, agitation and delirium research and studies suggest that a significant number of intensive care patients still receive outdated treatment as a consequence of inadequate guideline implementation. Where do the gaps exist in pain, agitation and delirium management, what are the barriers to guideline implementation and how can these problems be addressed to ensure patients receive optimised care?
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International guidelines and implementation bundles have become more evidence-based, patient-centred, and provide clear recommendations on the best-practice management of critically ill patients.
However, the intensive care community has highlighted the need for higher-order evidence in several areas of pain, agitation and delirium research and studies suggest that a significant number of intensive care patients still receive outdated treatment as a consequence of inadequate guideline implementation. Where do the gaps exist in pain, agitation and delirium management, what are the barriers to guideline implementation and how can these problems be addressed to ensure patients receive optimised care?
As an international professional consensus exercise, a panel of seven European intensive care nurses convened to discuss how to address these questions and establish how the provision of pain, agitation and delirium management can be improved in the intensive care unit.</abstract><cop>Netherlands</cop><pub>Elsevier Ltd</pub><pmid>29776706</pmid><doi>10.1016/j.iccn.2018.01.008</doi><tpages>9</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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subjects | Agitation Anesthesia Clinical medicine Collaboration Consensus Development Conferences as Topic Critical care Critical Care Nursing Critical Illness - nursing Delirium Delirium - nursing Delirium - prevention & control Europe Guideline Adherence Humans ICU Intensive care Intensive Care Units - standards Literature reviews Multidisciplinary Nurses Nursing PAD guidelines Pain Pain - nursing Pain - prevention & control Patient-centered care Patients Quality Improvement Sedation Workloads |
title | Gaps in pain, agitation and delirium management in intensive care: Outputs from a nurse workshop |
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