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- Grant A Pignatiello, Stephanie Griggs, Seth Alan Hoffer, and Ronald L Hickman.
- Grant A. Pignatiello is an assistant professor at the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio.
- Am. J. Crit. Care. 2024 Nov 1; 33 (6): 468472468-472.
BackgroundSupporting the sleep health of surrogate decision-makers of patients in the intensive care unit is a research priority. However, few studies have approached sleep health as a multidimensional construct, instead focusing on 1 or 2 dimensions in isolation.ObjectiveTo holistically examine the sleep health (satisfaction, timing, efficiency, duration) of surrogate decision-makers of critically ill patients.MethodsThis secondary analysis involved surrogate decision-makers of incapacitated intensive care unit patients at a tertiary medical center in northeastern Ohio (n = 19). Sleep-health data were captured by means of a subjective scale (satisfaction) and objectively (timing, efficiency, duration) by means of a wrist-worn accelerometer (Actiwatch Spectrum Plus; Philips Respironics). Upon enrollment, participants completed the satisfaction scale and wore the Actiwatch Spectrum Plus for 3 consecutive days. Descriptive statistics of the study variables were evaluated.ResultsA minority (15%) of the sample reported poor sleep satisfaction. Sleep timing variables were comparable to those found in other adult studies. Participants averaged approximately 6 hours of sleep per day with an average sleep efficiency of 83.7%.ConclusionsDespite adequate satisfaction scores, intensive care unit surrogate decision-makers' sleep duration is inadequate and sleep efficiency is suboptimal. Sleep-health interventions may be needed in this at-risk population. Future research should consider the impact of surrogate decision-maker sleep health on their capacity to serve in the surrogate decision-maker role.©2024 American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.
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