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Journal of critical care · Apr 2014
Multicenter StudyWhat stops us from following sedation recommendations in intensive care units? A multicentric qualitative study.
- Barbara Sneyers, Pierre-François Laterre, Emmanuelle Bricq, Marc M Perreault, Dominique Wouters, and Anne Spinewine.
- Clinical Pharmacy Research Group, Louvain Drug Research Institute, Université catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium; Department of Pharmacy, Cliniques universitaires saint Luc, Brussels, Belgium. Electronic address: Barbara.Sneyers@uclouvain.be.
- J Crit Care. 2014 Apr 1;29(2):291-7.
PurposeThe purpose of the study is to explore health care professionals' (HCPs) perceptions regarding sedation recommendations.Materials And MethodsThis is a qualitative study, using face-to-face semistructured interviews. Health care professionals from 4 Belgian hospitals were purposively sampled. We focused on recommendations involving strategies such as protocolized sedation, sedation scales, daily sedation interruption (DSI), and providing analgesia before sedation. Knowledge, perceived barriers, expected outcomes, and responsibilities were discussed for each recommendation. Two researchers independently performed content analysis, classifying quotes according to an interdisciplinary framework and creating new categories for emerging themes.ResultsData saturation was reached after 21 HCPs (physicians, nurses, and physiotherapists) were interviewed. Quotes were related to HCPs, guidelines or the system. Barriers were diverse according to the type of HCP or level of experience. Task characteristics impairing implementation of protocolized sedation included lack of means communicating goals or tasks to all HCPs providing care, ambiguous responsibilities, and unclear methodology on how to execute the recommendation. Fear of adverse events and lack of clarity regarding contraindications impair implementation of DSI.ConclusionBarriers impairing implementation of sedation recommendations vary according to the type of HCP and the choice of strategy targeting light sedation (protocolized sedation vs DSI). Improvement strategies must target HCPs separately and tailored to specific recommendation choices.Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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