Virtual trial protocol analysis of nursing workload intensity within ICU

Currently, effective glycaemic control protocols consume significant nursing time, which may be unsustainable as the number of patients requiring control increases with increasing rates of diabetes. This paper investigates the safety and efficacy of basal insulin therapy as a means to reduce nurse w...

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Main Authors: Razak, N.N.B.A., Razak, A.A., Pretty, C.G., Ahamad, N.H., Suhaimi, F.M., Jamaluddin, U.
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Published: 2018
Online Access:http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/jspui/handle/123456789/9588
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spelling my.uniten.dspace-95882018-03-01T10:14:55Z Virtual trial protocol analysis of nursing workload intensity within ICU Razak, N.N.B.A. Razak, A.A. Pretty, C.G. Ahamad, N.H. Suhaimi, F.M. Jamaluddin, U. Currently, effective glycaemic control protocols consume significant nursing time, which may be unsustainable as the number of patients requiring control increases with increasing rates of diabetes. This paper investigates the safety and efficacy of basal insulin therapy as a means to reduce nurse workload associated with glycaemic control in intensive care patients with stress hyperglycaemia. Validated virtual trial simulations (N = 40 patients) of a successful glycaemic control protocol (SPRINT) using 1-2 hourly interventions and a modified version using 4 hour interventions augmented with basal insulin therapy using Glargine. An additional model was used to capture the kinetics of Glargine. Workload was assessed by counting the total number of interventions (BG measurements, changes to insulin and nutrition rates) per day. Glycaemic performance was assessed by time in the target band (4.4-7.0 mmol/L) and number of severe hypoglycaemic episodes (BG<2.2 mmol/L). Workload reduction is around 30% (p<0.001) due to basal insulin therapy. Glycaemic control performance was slightly reduced from 86% to 80% (p=0.006) time in the target band using basal insulin therapy and 4 hourly interventions. However, safety was maintained with 0 incidence hypoglycaemia. Basal insulin therapy enables glycaemic control protocols with reduced intervention frequency while maintaining performance and safety. Reduced intervention frequency directly translates into reduced nurse workload associated with glycaemic control. © International Federation for Medical and Biological Engineering 2016. 2018-03-01T10:14:55Z 2018-03-01T10:14:55Z 2016 http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/jspui/handle/123456789/9588
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
description Currently, effective glycaemic control protocols consume significant nursing time, which may be unsustainable as the number of patients requiring control increases with increasing rates of diabetes. This paper investigates the safety and efficacy of basal insulin therapy as a means to reduce nurse workload associated with glycaemic control in intensive care patients with stress hyperglycaemia. Validated virtual trial simulations (N = 40 patients) of a successful glycaemic control protocol (SPRINT) using 1-2 hourly interventions and a modified version using 4 hour interventions augmented with basal insulin therapy using Glargine. An additional model was used to capture the kinetics of Glargine. Workload was assessed by counting the total number of interventions (BG measurements, changes to insulin and nutrition rates) per day. Glycaemic performance was assessed by time in the target band (4.4-7.0 mmol/L) and number of severe hypoglycaemic episodes (BG<2.2 mmol/L). Workload reduction is around 30% (p<0.001) due to basal insulin therapy. Glycaemic control performance was slightly reduced from 86% to 80% (p=0.006) time in the target band using basal insulin therapy and 4 hourly interventions. However, safety was maintained with 0 incidence hypoglycaemia. Basal insulin therapy enables glycaemic control protocols with reduced intervention frequency while maintaining performance and safety. Reduced intervention frequency directly translates into reduced nurse workload associated with glycaemic control. © International Federation for Medical and Biological Engineering 2016.
format
author Razak, N.N.B.A.
Razak, A.A.
Pretty, C.G.
Ahamad, N.H.
Suhaimi, F.M.
Jamaluddin, U.
spellingShingle Razak, N.N.B.A.
Razak, A.A.
Pretty, C.G.
Ahamad, N.H.
Suhaimi, F.M.
Jamaluddin, U.
Virtual trial protocol analysis of nursing workload intensity within ICU
author_facet Razak, N.N.B.A.
Razak, A.A.
Pretty, C.G.
Ahamad, N.H.
Suhaimi, F.M.
Jamaluddin, U.
author_sort Razak, N.N.B.A.
title Virtual trial protocol analysis of nursing workload intensity within ICU
title_short Virtual trial protocol analysis of nursing workload intensity within ICU
title_full Virtual trial protocol analysis of nursing workload intensity within ICU
title_fullStr Virtual trial protocol analysis of nursing workload intensity within ICU
title_full_unstemmed Virtual trial protocol analysis of nursing workload intensity within ICU
title_sort virtual trial protocol analysis of nursing workload intensity within icu
publishDate 2018
url http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/jspui/handle/123456789/9588
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score 13.160551