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  1. Article ; Online: Implementation of coordinated spontaneous awakening and breathing trials using telehealth-enabled, real-time audit and feedback for clinician adherence (TEACH): a type II hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial.

    Grissom, Colin K / Holubkov, Richard / Carpenter, Lori / Hanna, Bridgett / Jacobs, Jason R / Jones, Christopher / Knighton, Andrew J / Leither, Lindsay / Lisonbee, Dee / Peltan, Ithan D / Winberg, Carrie / Wolfe, Doug / Srivastava, Rajendu

    Implementation science : IS

    2023  Volume 18, Issue 1, Page(s) 45

    Abstract: Background: Intensive care unit (ICU) patients on mechanical ventilation often require sedation and analgesia to improve comfort and decrease pain. Prolonged sedation and analgesia, however, may increase time on mechanical ventilation, risk for ... ...

    Abstract Background: Intensive care unit (ICU) patients on mechanical ventilation often require sedation and analgesia to improve comfort and decrease pain. Prolonged sedation and analgesia, however, may increase time on mechanical ventilation, risk for ventilator associated pneumonia, and delirium. Coordinated interruptions in sedation [spontaneous awakening trials (SATs)] and spontaneous breathing trials (SBTs) increase ventilator-free days and improve mortality. Coordination of SATs and SBTs is difficult with substantial implementation barriers due to difficult-to-execute sequencing between nurses and respiratory therapists. Telehealth-enabled remote care has the potential to overcome these barriers and improve coordinated SAT and SBT adherence by enabling proactive high-risk patient monitoring, surveillance, and real-time assistance to frontline ICU teams.
    Methods: The telehealth-enabled, real-time audit and feedback for clinician adherence (TEACH) study will determine whether adding a telehealth augmented real-time audit and feedback to a usual supervisor-led audit and feedback intervention will yield higher coordinated SAT and SBT adherence and more ventilator-free days in mechanically ventilated patients than a usual supervisor-led audit and feedback intervention alone in a type II hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized clinical trial in 12 Intermountain Health hospitals with 15 ICUs. In the active comparator control group (six hospitals), the only intervention is the usual supervisor-led audit and feedback implementation. The telehealth-enabled support (TEACH) intervention in six hospitals adds real-time identification of patients eligible for a coordinated SAT and SBT and consultative input from telehealth respiratory therapists, nurses, and physicians to the bedside clinicians to promote adherence including real-time assistance with execution. All intubated and mechanically ventilated patients ≥ 16 years of age are eligible for enrollment except for patients who die on the day of intubation or have preexisting brain death. Based on preliminary power analyses, we plan a 36-month intervention period that includes a 90-day run-in period. Estimated enrollment in the final analysis is up to 9900 mechanically ventilated patients over 33 months.
    Discussion: The TEACH study will enhance implementation science by providing insight into how a telehealth intervention augmenting a usual audit and feedback implementation may improve adherence to coordinated SAT and SBT and increase ventilator-free days.
    Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT05141396 , registered 12/02/2021.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Feedback ; Telemedicine ; Pain ; Pain Management ; Allied Health Personnel
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-09-21
    Publishing country England
    Document type Randomized Controlled Trial ; Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
    ZDB-ID 2225822-X
    ISSN 1748-5908 ; 1748-5908
    ISSN (online) 1748-5908
    ISSN 1748-5908
    DOI 10.1186/s13012-023-01303-1
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Awakening and Breathing Coordination: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Determinants of Implementation.

    Olsen, Griffin H / Gee, Perry M / Wolfe, Doug / Winberg, Carrie / Carpenter, Lori / Jones, Chris / Jacobs, Jason R / Leither, Lindsay / Peltan, Ithan D / Singer, Sara J / Asch, Steven M / Grissom, Colin K / Srivastava, Rajendu / Knighton, Andrew J

    Annals of the American Thoracic Society

    2023  Volume 20, Issue 10, Page(s) 1483–1490

    Abstract: Rationale: ...

    Abstract Rationale:
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Middle Aged ; Ventilator Weaning/methods ; Pandemics ; Respiration, Artificial/methods ; Respiration ; Intensive Care Units
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-07-06
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2717461-X
    ISSN 2325-6621 ; 1943-5665 ; 2325-6621
    ISSN (online) 2325-6621 ; 1943-5665
    ISSN 2325-6621
    DOI 10.1513/AnnalsATS.202212-1048OC
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: An alert tool to promote lung protective ventilation for possible acute respiratory distress syndrome.

    Knighton, Andrew J / Kuttler, Kathryn G / Ranade-Kharkar, Pallavi / Allen, Lauren / Throne, Taylor / Jacobs, Jason R / Carpenter, Lori / Winberg, Carrie / Johnson, Kyle / Shrestha, Neer / Ferraro, Jeffrey P / Wolfe, Doug / Peltan, Ithan D / Srivastava, Rajendu / Grissom, Colin K

    JAMIA open

    2022  Volume 5, Issue 2, Page(s) ooac050

    Abstract: Objective: Computer-aided decision tools may speed recognition of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and promote consistent, timely treatment using lung-protective ventilation (LPV). This study evaluated implementation and service (process) ... ...

    Abstract Objective: Computer-aided decision tools may speed recognition of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and promote consistent, timely treatment using lung-protective ventilation (LPV). This study evaluated implementation and service (process) outcomes with deployment and use of a clinical decision support (CDS) synchronous alert tool associated with existing computerized ventilator protocols and targeted patients with possible ARDS not receiving LPV.
    Materials and methods: We performed an explanatory mixed methods study from December 2019 to November 2020 to evaluate CDS alert implementation outcomes across 13 intensive care units (ICU) in an integrated healthcare system with >4000 mechanically ventilated patients annually. We utilized quantitative methods to measure service outcomes including CDS alert tool utilization, accuracy, and implementation effectiveness. Attitudes regarding the appropriateness and acceptability of the CDS tool were assessed via an electronic field survey of physicians and advanced practice providers.
    Results: Thirty-eight percent of study encounters had at least one episode of LPV nonadherence. Addition of LPV treatment detection logic prevented an estimated 1812 alert messages (41%) over use of disease detection logic alone. Forty-eight percent of alert recommendations were implemented within 2 h. Alert accuracy was estimated at 63% when compared to gold standard ARDS adjudication, with sensitivity of 85% and positive predictive value of 62%. Fifty-seven percent of survey respondents observed one or more benefits associated with the alert.
    Conclusion: Introduction of a CDS alert tool based upon ARDS risk factors and integrated with computerized ventilator protocol instructions increased visibility to gaps in LPV use and promoted increased adherence to LPV.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-07-08
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ISSN 2574-2531
    ISSN (online) 2574-2531
    DOI 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooac050
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: Multi-factorial barriers and facilitators to high adherence to lung-protective ventilation using a computerized protocol: a mixed methods study.

    Knighton, Andrew J / Kean, Jacob / Wolfe, Doug / Allen, Lauren / Jacobs, Jason / Carpenter, Lori / Winberg, Carrie / Berry, Jay G / Peltan, Ithan D / Grissom, Colin K / Srivastava, Raj

    Implementation science communications

    2020  Volume 1, Issue 1, Page(s) 67

    Abstract: Background: Lung-protective ventilation (LPV) improves outcomes for patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) through the administration of low tidal volumes (≤ 6.5 ml/kg predicted body weight [PBW]) with co-titration of positive end- ... ...

    Abstract Background: Lung-protective ventilation (LPV) improves outcomes for patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) through the administration of low tidal volumes (≤ 6.5 ml/kg predicted body weight [PBW]) with co-titration of positive end-expiratory pressure and fraction of inspired oxygen. Many patients with ARDS, however, are not managed with LPV. The purpose of this study was to understand the implementation barriers and facilitators to the use of LPV and a computerized LPV clinical decision support (CDS) tool in intensive care units (ICUs) in preparation for a pilot hybrid implementation-effectiveness clinical trial.
    Methods: We performed an explanatory sequential mixed methods study from June 2018 to March 2019 to evaluate the variation in LPV adherence across 17 ICUs in an integrated healthcare system with > 4000 mechanically ventilated patients annually. We analyzed 47 key informant interviews of ICU physicians, respiratory therapists (RTs), and nurses in 3 of the ICUs using a qualitative content analysis paradigm to investigate site variation as defined by adherence level (low, medium, high) and to identify barriers and facilitators to LPV and LPV CDS tool use.
    Results: Forty-two percent of patients had an initial set tidal volume of ≤ 6.5 ml/kg PBW during the measurement period (site range 21-80%). LPV CDS tool use was 28% (site range 6-91%). This study's main findings revealed multi-factorial facilitators and barriers to use that varied by ICU site adherence level. The primary facilitator was that LPV and the LPV CDS tool could be used on all mechanically ventilated patients. Barriers included a persistent gap between clinician attitudes regarding the use of LPV and actual use, the perceived loss of autonomy associated with using a computerized protocol, the nature of physician-RT interaction in ventilation management, and the lack of clear organization measures of success.
    Conclusions: Variation in adherence to LPV persists in ICUs within a healthcare delivery system that was an early adopter of LPV. Potentially promising strategies to increase adherence to LPV and the LPV CDS tool for ARDS patients include initiating low tidal ventilation on all mechanically ventilated patients, establishing and measuring adherence measures, and focused education addressing the physician-RT interaction. These strategies represent a blueprint for a future hybrid implementation-effectiveness trial.
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-07-28
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ISSN 2662-2211
    ISSN (online) 2662-2211
    DOI 10.1186/s43058-020-00057-x
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article: Multi-factorial barriers and facilitators to high adherence to lung-protective ventilation using a computerized protocol: a mixed methods study

    Knighton, Andrew J. / Kean, Jacob / Wolfe, Doug / Allen, Lauren / Jacobs, Jason / Carpenter, Lori / Winberg, Carrie / Berry, Jay G. / Peltan, Ithan D. / Grissom, Colin K. / Srivastava, Raj

    Implementation Science Communications

    Keywords covid19
    Publisher WHO
    Document type Article
    Note WHO #Covidence: #680097
    Database COVID19

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