• J Hosp Med · Jun 2018

    Physiologic Monitor Alarm Rates at 5 Children's Hospitals.

    • Amanda C Schondelmeyer, Patrick W Brady, Veena V Goel, Maria Cvach, Nancy Blake, Colleen Mangeot, and Christopher P Bonafide.
    • Division of Hospital Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. amanda.schondelmeyer@cchmc.org.
    • J Hosp Med. 2018 Jun 1; 13 (6): 396398396-398.

    AbstractAlarm fatigue has been linked to patient morbidity and mortality in hospitals due to delayed or absent responses to monitor alarms. We sought to describe alarm rates at 5 freestanding children's hospitals during a single day and the types of alarms and proportions of patients monitored by using a point-prevalence, cross-sectional study design. We collected audible alarms on all inpatient units and calculated overall alarm rates and rates by alarm type per monitored patient per day. We found a total of 147,213 alarms during the study period, with 3-fold variation in alarm rates across hospitals among similar unit types. Across hospitals, onequarter of monitored beds were responsible for 71%, 61%, and 63% of alarms in medical-surgical, neonatal intensive care, and pediatric intensive care units, respectively. Future work focused on addressing nonactionable alarms in patients with the highest alarm counts may decrease alarm rates.© 2018 Society of Hospital Medicine.

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