• Br J Nurs · Oct 2019

    Observational Study

    Observation of inadvertent tube loss in ICU: effect of nasal bridles.

    • Kaylee Allan, Stephen Taylor, Rowan Clemente, and Deirdre Toher.
    • Nutrition Support Dietitian, Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, Southmead Hospital, Bristol.
    • Br J Nurs. 2019 Oct 10; 28 (18): 1170-1174.

    Backgroundsafe placement and securement of feeding tubes are essential to establishing early enteral nutrition. Nasogastric or nasojejunal feeding tubes are often inadvertently removed, and using a nasal bridle can reduce the number of tube replacements required.Aimto review current nasal bridle practices on one intensive care unit. Over a 3-month period, nasal bridle use was recorded to measure unintentional tube loss and tube duration (the time a tube remained in situ).Methodan observational service evaluation.Findings109 patients were recruited; 205 tubes were passed and 77 bridles were inserted, with 42% (n=46) of the bridles placed on day 1. Tubes secured with tape were more likely to be dislodged than tubes secured with a bridle, P=0.0001. Duration of tubes remaining in situ was significantly longer in patients who had a bridle fitted on day 1, P=0.0001 compared with tubes secured with tape.Conclusionsecuring a tube with a nasal bridle from day 1 is independently associated with reduced tube loss, increased duration of tube use, and likelihood that the tube would reach redundancy when it was no longer required.

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