首页> 外文期刊>Journal of clinical sleep medicine: JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine >Caregiver and Staff Perceptions of Disruptions to Pediatric Inpatient Sleep
【24h】

Caregiver and Staff Perceptions of Disruptions to Pediatric Inpatient Sleep

机译:护理人员和员工对小儿住院睡眠时间中断的看法

获取原文
       

摘要

Study Objectives:Sleep is critical to a child's health and well-being, but children are likely to sleep less and be awakened more often during the night in the hospital than at home. To date no studies have compared caregiver, nurse, and physician perspectives of nighttime sleep disruptions in the pediatric general medicine setting. Our aim was to assess caregiver, nurse, and physician perspectives on the most frequent in-hospital disruptors of sleep for pediatric patients. Additionally, we evaluated the degree of agreement of those opinions between the caregivers and medical team.Methods:Caregivers, nurses, and physicians were surveyed using the Potential Hospital Sleep Disruption and Noises Questionnaire (PHSDNQ) regarding their opinions on factors that disrupt sleep. Caregiver responses were collected via a convenience sample of patients hospitalized from February to August 2017 and hospital staff was surveyed once regarding overall perception. The perceived percentage of patients disrupted by each factor was calculated and compared among groups using chi-square tests. Using caregiver rank order based on mean response as the reference gold standard, the absolute differences of nurse and physician rank orders were summed and analyzed using a two-sample test of proportion. In addition, staff was asked knowledge and empowerment questions about how to maximize patient sleep in the hospital and responses were compared using chi-square tests.Results:A total of 162 caregivers, 77 nurses (84% response rate), and 81 physicians (90% response rate) completed surveys. Checking vital signs (50%), nurse/physician interruption (49%), and continuous pulse oximetry (38%) were the three most prevalent disruptors of pediatric inpatient sleep as reported by caregivers. Significant differences were observed between caregiver, nurse, and physician responses for pain, anxiety, alarms, noise, and tests (P .001 for all). Both nurse and physician rank orders were discordant when compared to caregivers; there was no significant difference between the two staff groups. When compared to physicians, nurses reported doing more to help children sleep in the hospital (33% versus 94%, P .001).Conclusions:Although caregivers report medical interventions such as checking vital signs, nurse/physician interruption, and continuous pulse oximetry as the most frequent disruptors of inpatient pediatric sleep, pediatric staff has poor insight into these disruptions.
机译:研究目标:睡眠对孩子的健康和福祉至关重要,但是与医院在家中相比,孩子在医院的夜晚睡眠较少,晚上醒来的频率更高。迄今为止,尚无研究比较小儿普通医学环境下护理人员,护士和医生对夜间睡眠中断的看法。我们的目的是评估护理人员,护理人员和医生对小儿患者最常见的院内睡眠干扰因素的看法。此外,我们评估了看护者与医疗团队之间这些意见的一致程度。方法:使用《潜在医院睡眠干扰和噪音调查表》(PHSDNQ)对看护者,护士和医生进行调查,调查他们对破坏睡眠的因素的看法。通过从2017年2月至2017年8月住院的患者便利样本收集护理人员的反应,并对医院工作人员进行了一次总体感觉调查。计算每个因素干扰的患者感知百分比,并使用卡方检验在各组之间进行比较。使用基于平均反应的护理人员等级顺序作为参考金标准,对护士和医生等级顺序的绝对差异进行了总结,并使用了两个样本的比例检验法进行了分析。此外,还向员工询问有关如何在医院中最大程度地增加患者睡眠的知识和赋权问题,并使用卡方检验对反应进行了比较。结果:共有162名护理人员,77名护士(84%答复率)和81名医生( 90%的回复率)完成了调查。根据护理人员的报告,检查生命体征(50%),护士/医师中断(49%)和连续脉搏血氧饱和度(38%)是小儿住院患者睡眠中最常见的三种干扰因素。在护理人员,护士和医生对疼痛,焦虑,警报,噪音和测试的反应之间观察到显着差异(所有P均为0.001)。与护理人员相比,护士和医师的等级顺序都不协调。两组人员之间没有显着差异。与医生相比,护士报告说他们在帮助孩子入院方面做得更多(33%比94%,P = 0.001)。结论:尽管护理人员报告了医疗干预措施,例如检查生命体征,护士/医师中断以及连续脉搏血氧仪作为住院小儿睡眠最频繁的破坏者,儿科工作人员对这些破坏的了解不足。

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号