Challenges of the Implementation of a Delirium Rate Scale in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit: A Qualitative Approach
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Setting and Context
2.3. Sample
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
2.6. Trust and Reliability Strategist
2.7. Ethics Approval and Consent to Participate
3. Results
3.1. Childhood Delirium in the PICU
“…it is fashionable; there is no child who has been with us for a while, for whatever reason, who is not labeled as having delirium”.NUR 6
“…it seems to be fashionable”.NUR 2
“…I have never seen as many children diagnosed with delirium,…as I have seen so far”.NUR 7
“I hadn’t heard the word delirium for at least a year and a half or two years,…… I heard kids with “withdrawal”, taking methadone and stuff. I don’t think I saw any hypoactive delirium either. They were all clear withdrawal syndromes. So I think there’s been some change in the way we diagnose or something,…. Or what used to be called Withdrawal Syndrome is now called delirium.NUR 3
“…it is not possible that depending on the doctor on duty, children are classified as delirious, and if there is another doctor, they are not. Perhaps it is because one has a perception that the other does not, and that is why there are more deliriums now than before….. when the children are in the same situation”.NUR 6
“Nursing professionals must be taken into account because we are with the child 24 h a day,… but we cannot establish a diagnosis; that is the doctor’s job”.NUR 3
“we can tell the doctor what we think about the diagnosis of delirium in a child… but it is up to him (or her) to label it or not”.NUR 2
“For me, … a child with delirium, …well, it is a child who has been sedated, who has just woken up and is conscious but is not connected. He is therefore looking up a lot. He doesn’t communicate well and that’s why he cries and is nervous…”.NUR 6
“Delirium is treated with medication prescribed by the doctor. Normally with levomepromazine”.NUR 1
“I think they put him on Sinogan. Basically. I don’t know if they put him on something else. I think… dexmedetomidine”.NUR 5
“Well, we try to make them feel as comfortable as possible. But I don’t distinguish between those who have delirium and those who don’t. I think it’s good for all children, a quiet environment, with little noise, and the parents present with them. It calms them down”.NUR 3
“If we can do something… And we have time. So… we do those things too”.NUR 6
3.2. Childhood Abstinence Syndrome in the PICU
“Perhaps we lack more information or more understanding of the difference between delirium and withdrawal syndrome. I don’t see it very clearly nowadays”.NUR 5
“There is a bit of confusion as to what is or isn’t delirium. That is confused with what is withdrawal syndrome”.NUR 2
“All children who used to have withdrawal syndrome and now what is called delirium. Normally hypoactive, which is true that we didn’t see it before,…… Of course, that’s what it is for me, in the other (hyperactive delirium) it would be difficult to differentiate it from withdrawal syndrome. For me. I haven’t received any training”.NUR 1
“And from a year ago, a lot of children have been seen… …Yes, there is a difference between withdrawal syndrome and hyperactive syndrome. Because I do notice that some tremors and things are different from withdrawal, and the other way around. The hypoactive one, you can see that the child is… that he doesn’t move, he’s looking at the moon… And you can see that it’s something”.NUR 3
“The concepts are not clear. In fact, not even for them. Because of the doctors, there are eight who still talk about withdrawal syndrome and there are two who are in charge of delirium and are the ones who diagnose it”.NUR 6
3.3. Use of Diagnostic Tools
“I have to apply the delirium scale to a girl who is intubated, sedated and relaxed. So I’m not going to be able to answer most of the things. What’s going to come out of it? It’s not assessable.”NUR 1
“Sometimes the parameters that are asked are not appropriate for all age groups”.NUR 3
“Well, … I don’t see them (delirim scale) as an objective tool at all. I don’t know how to assess … I don’t know what score to give the child, …?”NUR 6
“The delirium scales you have to make them up because you can’t complete them if you don’t make them up. Because they are not real. That’s what I think.”.NUR 5
“For me that tool is useless. It’s that, really, it’s also very … never, rarely, such … I mean, I think that’s what I think. Maybe their mother, who is at the bedside, can give you an answer, and she will also be wrong”.NUR 4
“While the study was being carried out, it had to be done systematically to all children, even if they had a catheterisation, and they didn’t need so…beasuse the child was aware…”.NUR 5
“It goes like a packet. Just as if they (the doctors) order us to put a nasogastric tube into the child, they order us to assess the delirium scale. But it is not necesary … We know when the delirium scale should be applied to a child, and when it is not needed …. We know what a valid measurement is, and when it is not”.NUR 1
“We have the right to decide that this child doesn’t have to pass the delirium scale, because he doesn’t have delirium. He is not taxed and others are”.NUR 2
3.4. Professional Training
So they (…the doctors…) have started to train themselves, they introduce the scales to us and from there they get into training that we…they don’t take into account.NUR 3
Maybe we have little training on delirium. Nowadays, this subject is more in vogue, and I do think it is important to deal with it. But I think we need a bit more… We need to know what delirium is and how it is treated.NUR 1
Nothing has been explained to us. We have a video there, which they play it for us to watch, but apparently it couldn’t be opened. I asked recently and he told me that yes, I could watch it, but in the end we haven’t tried it. But it wasn’t training either, it was just a video. Here. You know?NUR 3
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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ID | Age (Years) | Nursing Experience (Years) | PICU Experience (Years) | Adult ICU Experience (Years) | Specific Training Pediatric Nurse |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
N1 | 26 | 4 | 1 | No | Yes |
N2 | 25 | 4 | 1 | No | Yes |
N3 | 28 | 8 | 3 | No | Yes |
N4 | 35 | 13 | 6 | No | Yes |
N5 | 37 | 13 | 7 | No | Yes |
N6 | 35 | 14 | 15 | Yes | No |
N7 | 42 | 23 | 15 | Yes | No |
First Order Codes | Code Definition | Main Themes | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Specific Training Delirium for Nursing | Expressions related to nurses’ training on the subject of delirium are included here. | Training of professionals |
2 | Specific Training Delirium for Medicine | The expressions of the nursing professionals regarding the specific training of doctors on the subject of delirium are included here. | |
4 | Diagnosis of Delirium | The different definitions of delirium according to the opinion of the professionals are included here. | Childhood Delirium in ICU. |
5 | Definition of Delirium | The different comments defining delirium and describing its characteristics according to the participants are included in this code. | |
6 | Pharmacological Treatment of Delirium | Comments referring to the different drugs used to treat delirium are included in this code. | |
7 | Non-pharmacological Treatment of Delirium | This category includes activities and measures used for the non-pharmacological treatment of patients with delirium. | |
8 | Delirium Incidence | It collects the incidence data according to sex and age of delirium in the unit’s patients. | |
9 | Delirium Prevention Measures | Collects the activities carried out by the nursing team for the prevention of delirium in patients. | |
10 | Delirium Registry | Collects the additional resources used to record delirium, the characteristics of delirium in each patient, as well as extra data that could be relevant. | |
11 | Treatment Withdrawal Syndrome | Pharmacological measures used for treatment. | Abstinence Syndrome in ICU. |
12 | Withdrawal Syndrome Symptoms | This category collects the symptoms of withdrawal syndrome that can be observed in patients. | |
3 | Confusion between Withdrawal Syndrome and Delirium | Nurses’ expressions and ideas about the confusion between Withdrawal Syndrome and Delirium. | |
13 | Limitations Scales | They describe the drawbacks and limitations of the scales used to measure delirium. | Use of Diagnostic Tools. |
14 | Criteria for Passing Scales | The indications and situations in which these scales are used, as well as the nursing staff’s own criteria, are included. | |
15 | Validity Scales | The opinions of nursing professionals on the validity and reliability of the scales measuring delirium are included. |
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Balsalobre-Martínez, P.; Montosa-García, R.; Marín-Yago, A.; Baeza-Mirete, M.; Muñoz-Rubio, G.M.; Rojo-Rojo, A. Challenges of the Implementation of a Delirium Rate Scale in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit: A Qualitative Approach. Healthcare 2024, 12, 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12010052
Balsalobre-Martínez P, Montosa-García R, Marín-Yago A, Baeza-Mirete M, Muñoz-Rubio GM, Rojo-Rojo A. Challenges of the Implementation of a Delirium Rate Scale in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit: A Qualitative Approach. Healthcare. 2024; 12(1):52. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12010052
Chicago/Turabian StyleBalsalobre-Martínez, Paula, Raquel Montosa-García, Ana Marín-Yago, Manuel Baeza-Mirete, Gloria María Muñoz-Rubio, and Andrés Rojo-Rojo. 2024. "Challenges of the Implementation of a Delirium Rate Scale in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit: A Qualitative Approach" Healthcare 12, no. 1: 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12010052
APA StyleBalsalobre-Martínez, P., Montosa-García, R., Marín-Yago, A., Baeza-Mirete, M., Muñoz-Rubio, G. M., & Rojo-Rojo, A. (2024). Challenges of the Implementation of a Delirium Rate Scale in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit: A Qualitative Approach. Healthcare, 12(1), 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12010052