• Respiratory care · Apr 2021

    Prevalence, Proportionality, and Cause of Ventilator Alarms in a Pediatric Intensive Care Setting.

    • Leo Langga, Jisoo Oh, David López, Nancy Blake, Edward McField, Justin Hotz, Leonardo Nava-Guerra, Kelby Knox, and Richard Chinnock.
    • Department of Respiratory Care, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California. leolangga@gmail.com.
    • Respir Care. 2021 Apr 1; 66 (4): 541550541-550.

    BackgroundClinical alarms play an important role in monitoring physiological parameters, vital signs and medical device function in the hospital intensive care environment. Delays in staff response to alarms are well documented as health care providers become desensitized to increased rates of nuisance alarms. Patients can be at increased risk of harm due to alarm fatigue. Current literature suggests alarms from ventilators contribute significantly to nonactionable alarms. A greater understanding of which specific ventilator alarms are most common and the rates at which they occur is fundamental to improving alarm management.MethodsA retrospective review was performed on alarms that occurred on the Avea and Servo-i ventilators used in the pediatric ICU and pediatric cardiothoracic ICU at a major metropolitan children's hospital. High- and medium-priority alarms, as classified by the manufacturer, were studied between June 1, 2017, and November 31, 2017. Descriptive data analysis and a 2-proportion z-test were performed to identify proportionality, cause, and prevalence rates in the pediatric ICU and the cardiothoracic ICU.ResultsEleven distinct ventilator alarms were identified during 2,091 d of mechanical ventilation. The Inspiratory Flow Overrange alarm (42.4%) on the Servo-i, Low VTE (20.4%; expiratory tidal volume) and Circuit Integrity alarm (20.0%) on the Avea were the most prevalent causes according to ventilator type. Medium-priority alarms comprised 68.7% of all Servo-i alarms, and high-priority alarms comprised 84% of all Avea alarms. The 2-sample test of proportions was significant for differences between both areas (P < .001). The overall alarm prevalence rate was 22.5 ventilator alarms per ventilator-day per patient.ConclusionsThe cause and proportion of alarms varied by ventilator and care unit. High-priority alarms were most common with the Avea and medium-priority alarms for the Servo-i. The overall combined ventilator alarm prevalence rate was 22.5 alarms per ventilator-day per patient.Copyright © 2021 by Daedalus Enterprises.

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