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Surgical ward nurses’ responses to worry: An observational descriptive study

Surgical ward nurses’ responses to worry: An observational descriptive study
Surgical ward nurses’ responses to worry: An observational descriptive study

Background: Rapid response systems aim to improve early recognition and treatment of deteriorating general ward patients. Sole reliance on deviating vital signs to escalate care in rapid response systems disregards nurses’ judgments about a patient's condition based on worry and other indicators of deterioration. To make worry explicit, the Dutch-Early-Nurse-Worry-Indicator-Score was developed, summarising non-quantifiable signs of deterioration in the nine indicators: breathing, circulation, temperature, mentation, agitation, pain, unexpected trajectory, patient indicates not feeling well and nurses’ subjective observations. Nurses’ worry can be present even when vital signs are largely unchanged, enabling treatment to commence at an early stage. On the other hand, reliance on nurses’ worry might lead to unnecessary calls for medical assistance or an overuse of rapid response teams. Objectives: Explore the occurrence of nurses’ worry in real time, determine whether acting on worry leads to unnecessary action and determine the indicators present at different levels of deterioration. Design: A prospective cohort study. Setting: Three surgical wards in a tertiary, university affiliated teaching hospital. Participants: All nurses participated and adult, surgical, native speaking patients were included in the study. Methods: A descriptive analysis is performed on one year of data on surgical ward nurses’ experience of worry and its underlying indicators in addition to routinely measured vital signs. Results: Out of a total of 46,571 measurements, vital signs were normal 18,727 times, with worry expressed 605 times (3%), resulting in 62 calls (10.2%) to the attending physician. More than half of these calls resulted in necessary interventions. Calls for assistance and subsequent intervention after worry was expressed increase in parallel with early warning scores. The breathing indicator showed the highest increase in frequency with increasing deviation in vital signs. Conclusion: This study suggests that worry has potential as an early indicator of deterioration, alerting nurses and encouraging them to start timely interventions. Overuse of medical assistance could not be determined, The Dutch-Early-Nurse-Worry-Indicator-Score objectifies worry when vital signs do not support its presence and systematic assessment of these indicators is recommended.

Deterioration, Dutch-Early-Nurse-Worry-Indicator-Score, Early indicator, Nurses, Rapid response system, Responses, Vital signs, Worry
0020-7489
90-95
Douw, Gooske
94b773e5-5b74-4cb0-997f-db7a010243d3
Huisman-de Waal, Getty
eea23d85-6d47-41be-b364-d3cb0d4e774a
van Zanten, Arthur R.H.
d73e8329-40a8-463b-b9c3-9529414fca22
van der Hoeven, Johannes G.
78ca86cf-76cd-4578-b063-649414423b43
Schoonhoven, Lisette
46a2705b-c657-409b-b9da-329d5b1b02de
Douw, Gooske
94b773e5-5b74-4cb0-997f-db7a010243d3
Huisman-de Waal, Getty
eea23d85-6d47-41be-b364-d3cb0d4e774a
van Zanten, Arthur R.H.
d73e8329-40a8-463b-b9c3-9529414fca22
van der Hoeven, Johannes G.
78ca86cf-76cd-4578-b063-649414423b43
Schoonhoven, Lisette
46a2705b-c657-409b-b9da-329d5b1b02de

Douw, Gooske, Huisman-de Waal, Getty, van Zanten, Arthur R.H., van der Hoeven, Johannes G. and Schoonhoven, Lisette (2018) Surgical ward nurses’ responses to worry: An observational descriptive study. International Journal of Nursing Studies, 85, 90-95. (doi:10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2018.05.009).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Rapid response systems aim to improve early recognition and treatment of deteriorating general ward patients. Sole reliance on deviating vital signs to escalate care in rapid response systems disregards nurses’ judgments about a patient's condition based on worry and other indicators of deterioration. To make worry explicit, the Dutch-Early-Nurse-Worry-Indicator-Score was developed, summarising non-quantifiable signs of deterioration in the nine indicators: breathing, circulation, temperature, mentation, agitation, pain, unexpected trajectory, patient indicates not feeling well and nurses’ subjective observations. Nurses’ worry can be present even when vital signs are largely unchanged, enabling treatment to commence at an early stage. On the other hand, reliance on nurses’ worry might lead to unnecessary calls for medical assistance or an overuse of rapid response teams. Objectives: Explore the occurrence of nurses’ worry in real time, determine whether acting on worry leads to unnecessary action and determine the indicators present at different levels of deterioration. Design: A prospective cohort study. Setting: Three surgical wards in a tertiary, university affiliated teaching hospital. Participants: All nurses participated and adult, surgical, native speaking patients were included in the study. Methods: A descriptive analysis is performed on one year of data on surgical ward nurses’ experience of worry and its underlying indicators in addition to routinely measured vital signs. Results: Out of a total of 46,571 measurements, vital signs were normal 18,727 times, with worry expressed 605 times (3%), resulting in 62 calls (10.2%) to the attending physician. More than half of these calls resulted in necessary interventions. Calls for assistance and subsequent intervention after worry was expressed increase in parallel with early warning scores. The breathing indicator showed the highest increase in frequency with increasing deviation in vital signs. Conclusion: This study suggests that worry has potential as an early indicator of deterioration, alerting nurses and encouraging them to start timely interventions. Overuse of medical assistance could not be determined, The Dutch-Early-Nurse-Worry-Indicator-Score objectifies worry when vital signs do not support its presence and systematic assessment of these indicators is recommended.

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Accepted/In Press date: 16 May 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 May 2018
Published date: 1 September 2018
Keywords: Deterioration, Dutch-Early-Nurse-Worry-Indicator-Score, Early indicator, Nurses, Rapid response system, Responses, Vital signs, Worry

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 424861
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/424861
ISSN: 0020-7489
PURE UUID: 300f8b28-410a-4bc7-980c-932a0c86af33
ORCID for Lisette Schoonhoven: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7129-3766

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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2018 11:50
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:09

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Contributors

Author: Gooske Douw
Author: Getty Huisman-de Waal
Author: Arthur R.H. van Zanten
Author: Johannes G. van der Hoeven

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