• Dimens Crit Care Nurs · Sep 2015

    Delirium and Dementia in the Intensive Care Unit: Increasing Awareness for Decreasing Risk, Improving Outcomes, and Family Engagement.

    • Jennifer Volland, Anna Fisher, and Diane Drexler.
    • Jennifer Volland, DHA, RN, CPHQ, NEA-BC, FACHE, is vice president of Program Development at National Research Corporation, Omaha, Nebraska. Anna Fisher, DHA, CDP, is director of Education and Quality at Hillcrest Health Services, Bellevue, Nebraska. Diane Drexler, MBA, BSN, RN, FACHE, is chief nursing officer at the Yavapai Regional Medical Center, Prescott, Arizona.
    • Dimens Crit Care Nurs. 2015 Sep 1; 34 (5): 259-64.

    Abstract: Longer stays in the intensive care unit (ICU) can be an opportunistic battlefield where not only is the length of stay longer, but also there is increased time that lapses with the potential for a patient fall, nosocomial infection, urinary tract infection, and other untoward events (http://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-06-09-00090.pdf; ASHRM Forum. 2014;Q3:10-14). As such, the push has become for shorter lengths of stay whenever possible. Delirium and dementia are 2 conditions that the ICU clinician must remain diligent in monitoring for status changes. Delirium poses the threat of longer-term undesirable outcomes and is a potential inherent risk in the care delivered. It rises to the level of a medical emergency that can be deadly but, when caught early, can be treated and resolved (Science Daily, September 16, 2013). Setting expectations with families, providing adequate education, and involving them in a holistic view of patient-centered care can help toward the detection of differences that may occur from an ICU stay. Interventions the ICU clinician can take for increasing self, patient, and family awareness to decrease risk and improve outcomes and ways to deepen family engagement in these populations are explored with practical applications.

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