• Critical care medicine · Apr 2015

    Comparative Study

    Clinical and Psychologic Effects of Early Mobilization in Patients Treated in a Neurologic ICU: A Comparative Study.

    • Kate Klein, Malissa Mulkey, James F Bena, and Nancy M Albert.
    • 1Neurological Intensive Care Unit, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, OH. 2Neuroscience Services, Duke University Hospital, Durham, NC. 3Quantitative Health Science, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, OH. 4Nursing Research and Innovation, Cleveland Clinic Health System, Cleveland OH.
    • Crit. Care Med. 2015 Apr 1; 43 (4): 865-73.

    ObjectiveTo determine if an early mobilization protocol increased mobility and improved clinical and psychological outcomes. Currently, there is minimal research on the effects of early mobilization in patients with primary neurologic injury.DesignProspective, two-group pre/post comparative design with data collection 4 months pre- and postintervention with a 4-month run-in period.SettingTwenty-two-bed neurologic ICU in a 1,200-bed urban, quaternary-care, academic hospital in Northeast Ohio.SubjectsCritically ill patients with primary neurologic injury admitted to the neurologic ICU.InterventionAn early mobility program included a progressive mobility protocol, written orders, and staff (clinical nurse specialist clinical technician) who advocated for and assisted with mobility. Highest mobility achieved was assessed daily for 13 days, clinical outcomes were retrieved from electronic databases, and psychological profile was collected by valid, reliable questionnaire at/after neurologic ICU discharge. Analyses included comparative statistics and multivariable modeling.Measurements And Main ResultsOf 637 patients, 260 were preintervention and 377 were postintervention. Patient characteristics were similar between groups, except postintervention group patients had less history of using walking aids and more gait abnormalities, and were less likely to require mechanical ventilation in the neurologic ICU (all p≤0.006). Compared with preintervention, postintervention patients had higher mobility levels and decreased hospital and neurologic ICU length of stay; were more likely to be discharged home (all p≤0.002); had decreased bloodstream infection, hospital-acquired pressure ulcer, and anxiety rates (all p<0.03); and had no change in mortality, ventilator-associated pneumonia, deep vein thrombosis, depression, and hostility. In multivariable analyses, postintervention patients had higher mobility levels (p<0.001), had shorter mean hospital and neurologic ICU length of stay (both p<0.001), and were more likely to be discharged home (p=0.033) compared with preintervention patients.ConclusionsA neurologic ICU early mobility protocol increased highest neurologic ICU mobility and discharge home and decreased length of stay, but did not improve quality metrics or psychological profile.

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