Development and psychometric testing of the optimizing context in assessing sedation in ICU (OCEAN-ICU) instrument to optimize sedation use in intensive care
Development and psychometric testing of the optimizing context in assessing sedation in ICU (OCEAN-ICU) instrument to optimize sedation use in intensive care
CONTEXT: Sedation and pain management are core strategies used to manage discomfort, anxiety, and pain in intensive care; however, strategies to improve this practice are inconsistently implemented with differential effect.
OBJECTIVES: We describe the development and psychometric testing of the Optimizing ContExt in Assessing sedatioN in ICU (OCEAN-ICU) instrument intended for use in intensive care to guide development of change strategies to optimize sedation. We also provide descriptive results.
METHODS AND MODELS: A prospective instrument development study was undertaken in the United Kingdom. Clinical staff who self-identified as responsible for prescribing, administering, and/or advising on sedation to invasively mechanically ventilated intensive care patients participated. Developed from previous interviews and refined during pilot testing, the draft instrument incorporated 68 statements aligned with the theoretical domains framework. Interested clinicians completed an online survey. Item responses were summed descriptively. Congruence between rankings of agreement and importance were assessed descriptively. Construct validity was assessed using confirmatory factor analysis.
RESULTS: 252 usable responses were received from U.K.-based critical care clinicians (53 medical doctors, 149 nurses, 25 pharmacists, 16 physiotherapists, and nine other healthcare professionals). After refining, 39 items were retained with an overall internal consistency of 0.81 and construct validity of χ2/degrees of freedom = 1.86, comparative fit index = 0.73, and root mean square error of approximation = 0.058.
INTERPRETATION: Areas of practice with high levels of agreement and perceived importance focused on the value of light sedation and the lack of progress in sedation minimization. Conflict between importance and agreement was reported in the effective assessment and management of pain, delirium, and agitation.
CONCLUSIONS: The OCEAN-ICU instrument has been developed to determine barriers and facilitators to improving sedation practice in local intensive care contexts. Further validation is required before testing whether the development of change strategies based on identified barriers and facilitators are effective in optimizing sedation practice.
Aitken, Leanne M.
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Castro Avilo, Ana
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Dyson, Judith
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Kydonakl, Kallipo
f7989a17-6b84-4ead-bd7d-8a0bd0e2f6c9
Blackwood, Bronagh
4fa7b74c-663d-43bd-b89c-20dc21d0d7b8
Iliopoulou, Katerina
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Mckenzie, Cathrine
13ad9cca-fa4f-451b-a3f4-5c83d1ef3b8c
Walsh, Timothy
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Aitken, Leanne M.
ba136971-d8e4-418f-80af-df6d67dff207
Castro Avilo, Ana
e28c0966-610a-4049-a6d6-8f69b2b8016f
Dyson, Judith
51a9ca84-1128-4244-8312-99bd5c85183c
Kydonakl, Kallipo
f7989a17-6b84-4ead-bd7d-8a0bd0e2f6c9
Blackwood, Bronagh
4fa7b74c-663d-43bd-b89c-20dc21d0d7b8
Iliopoulou, Katerina
0c2389bd-b98b-4256-8cee-0fc05845bc14
Mckenzie, Cathrine
13ad9cca-fa4f-451b-a3f4-5c83d1ef3b8c
Walsh, Timothy
755f19b7-901c-4078-8146-b3fd14ad79d0
Aitken, Leanne M., Castro Avilo, Ana, Dyson, Judith, Kydonakl, Kallipo, Blackwood, Bronagh, Iliopoulou, Katerina, Mckenzie, Cathrine and Walsh, Timothy
(2026)
Development and psychometric testing of the optimizing context in assessing sedation in ICU (OCEAN-ICU) instrument to optimize sedation use in intensive care.
Critical Care Explorations, 8 (3), [e1384].
(doi:10.1097/CCE.0000000000001384).
Abstract
CONTEXT: Sedation and pain management are core strategies used to manage discomfort, anxiety, and pain in intensive care; however, strategies to improve this practice are inconsistently implemented with differential effect.
OBJECTIVES: We describe the development and psychometric testing of the Optimizing ContExt in Assessing sedatioN in ICU (OCEAN-ICU) instrument intended for use in intensive care to guide development of change strategies to optimize sedation. We also provide descriptive results.
METHODS AND MODELS: A prospective instrument development study was undertaken in the United Kingdom. Clinical staff who self-identified as responsible for prescribing, administering, and/or advising on sedation to invasively mechanically ventilated intensive care patients participated. Developed from previous interviews and refined during pilot testing, the draft instrument incorporated 68 statements aligned with the theoretical domains framework. Interested clinicians completed an online survey. Item responses were summed descriptively. Congruence between rankings of agreement and importance were assessed descriptively. Construct validity was assessed using confirmatory factor analysis.
RESULTS: 252 usable responses were received from U.K.-based critical care clinicians (53 medical doctors, 149 nurses, 25 pharmacists, 16 physiotherapists, and nine other healthcare professionals). After refining, 39 items were retained with an overall internal consistency of 0.81 and construct validity of χ2/degrees of freedom = 1.86, comparative fit index = 0.73, and root mean square error of approximation = 0.058.
INTERPRETATION: Areas of practice with high levels of agreement and perceived importance focused on the value of light sedation and the lack of progress in sedation minimization. Conflict between importance and agreement was reported in the effective assessment and management of pain, delirium, and agitation.
CONCLUSIONS: The OCEAN-ICU instrument has been developed to determine barriers and facilitators to improving sedation practice in local intensive care contexts. Further validation is required before testing whether the development of change strategies based on identified barriers and facilitators are effective in optimizing sedation practice.
Text
OCEAN-ICU final accepted full file
- Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 30 January 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 March 2026
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 510693
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510693
ISSN: 2639-8028
PURE UUID: 7f1c3647-fa45-46fe-9229-00537370ac5c
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Date deposited: 16 Apr 2026 17:06
Last modified: 17 Apr 2026 02:17
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Contributors
Author:
Leanne M. Aitken
Author:
Ana Castro Avilo
Author:
Judith Dyson
Author:
Kallipo Kydonakl
Author:
Bronagh Blackwood
Author:
Katerina Iliopoulou
Author:
Cathrine Mckenzie
Author:
Timothy Walsh
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