Expanding Critical Care Delivery beyond the Intensive Care Unit: Determining the Design and Implementation Needs for a Tele-Critical Care Consultation Service

被引:4
|
作者
Abraham, Joanna [1 ,2 ,5 ]
Kandasamy, Madhumitha [1 ]
Fritz, Bradley [1 ]
Konzen, Lisa [3 ]
White, Jason [3 ]
Drewry, Anne [1 ]
Palmer, Christopher [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Anesthesiol, St Louis, MO USA
[2] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Inst Informat Data Sci & Biostat, St Louis, MO USA
[3] Barnes Jewish Hosp, St Louis, MO USA
[4] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Emergency Med, St Louis, MO USA
[5] Washington Univ, Sch Med, 660 South Euclid,Campus POB 8054, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
来源
APPLIED CLINICAL INFORMATICS | 2024年 / 15卷 / 01期
关键词
ICU; admissions; transfers; rapid response teams; acute care; eICU; tele-ICU; telemedicine; early warning system; on-demand; RAPID RESPONSE TEAM; UNPLANNED ICU ADMISSION; CLINICAL DETERIORATION; HOSPITAL MORTALITY; TELEMEDICINE; OUTCOMES; IMPACT; STAY; MULTICENTER; EMERGENCY;
D O I
10.1055/s-0044-1780508
中图分类号
R-058 [];
学科分类号
摘要
Background Unplanned intensive care unit (ICU) admissions from medical/surgical floors and increased boarding times of ICU patients in the emergency department (ED) are common; approximately half of these are associated with adverse events. We explore the potential role of a tele-critical care consult service (TC3) in managing critically ill patients outside of the ICU and potentially preventing low-acuity unplanned admissions and also investigate its design and implementation needs. Methods We conducted a qualitative study involving general observations of the units, shadowing of clinicians during patient transfers, and interviews with clinicians from the ED, medical/surgical floor units and their ICU counterparts, tele-ICU, and the rapid response team at a large academic medical center in St. Louis, Missouri, United States. We used a hybrid thematic analysis approach supported by open and structured coding using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). Results Over 165 hours of observations/shadowing and 26 clinician interviews were conducted. Our findings suggest that a tele-critical care consult (TC3) service can prevent avoidable, lower acuity ICU admissions by offering a second set of eyes via remote monitoring and providing guidance to bedside and rapid response teams in the care delivery of these patients on the floor/ED. CFIR-informed enablers impacting the successful implementation of the TC3 service included the optional and on-demand features of the TC3 service, around-the-clock availability, and continuous access to trained critical care clinicians for avoidable lower acuity (ALA) patients outside of the ICU, familiarity with tele-ICU staff, and a willingness to try alternative patient risk mitigation strategies for ALA patients (suggested by TC3), before transferring all unplanned admissions to ICUs. Conversely, the CFIR-informed barriers to implementation included a desire to uphold physician autonomy by floor/ED clinicians, potential role conflicts with rapid response teams, additional workload for floor/ED nurses, concerns about obstructing unavoidable, higher acuity admissions, and discomfort with audio-visual tools. To amplify these potential enablers and mitigate potential barriers to TC3 implementation, informed by this study, we propose two key characteristics- essential for extending the delivery of critical care services beyond the ICU - underlying a telemedicine critical care consultation model including its virtual footprint and on-demand and optional service features. Conclusion Tele-critical care represents an innovative strategy for delivering safe and high-quality critical care services to lower acuity borderline patients outside the ICU setting.
引用
收藏
页码:178 / 191
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Critical Care Outside the Intensive Care Unit
    Hager, David N.
    Gunnerson, Kyle J.
    Macdonald, Stephen
    CRITICAL CARE CLINICS, 2024, 40 (03)
  • [22] Critical care outwith the intensive care unit
    Holder, P
    Cuthbertson, BH
    CLINICAL MEDICINE, 2005, 5 (05) : 449 - 451
  • [23] Health disparities in service delivery in the intensive care unit: A critical ethnographic study
    Yarahmadi, Sajad
    Soleimani, Mohsen
    Gholami, Mohammad
    Fakhr-Movahedi, Ali
    Madani, Seyed Mohsen Saeidi
    NURSING IN CRITICAL CARE, 2024,
  • [24] Healthy Work Environment Standards in Tele-Critical Care Nursing
    Williams, Lisa -Mae
    Carpenter, Dawn
    Mercier, Marie
    Reynolds, Erin
    Davis, Theresa
    AACN ADVANCED CRITICAL CARE, 2023, 34 (04) : 350 - 358
  • [25] National Emergency Tele-Critical Care in a Pandemic: Barriers and Solutions
    Pamplin, Jeremy C.
    Gray, Brooke
    Quinn, Matthew T.
    Little, Jeanette R.
    Colombo, Christopher J.
    Subramanian, Sanjay
    Farmer, Joseph C.
    Ries, Michael
    Scott, Benjamin
    CRITICAL CARE EXPLORATIONS, 2024, 6 (05) : E1091
  • [26] Operation analysis of the tele-critical care service demonstrates value delivery, service adaptation over time, and distress among tele-providers
    Laudanski, Krzysztof
    Huffenberger, Ann Marie
    Scott, Michael J.
    Williams, Maria
    Wain, Justin
    Jablonski, Juliane
    Hanson, C. William, III
    FRONTIERS IN MEDICINE, 2022, 9
  • [27] EXPANDING THE CRITICAL CARE REHABILITATION SERVICE ACROSS LTHT CRITICAL CARE
    Hunsley, Rachel
    NURSING IN CRITICAL CARE, 2022, 27 : 40 - 41
  • [28] Critical Care Delivery in the Emergency Department Bringing the Intensive Care Unit to the Patient
    Kuk, Won-Jun
    Park, Jun Soo
    Gunnerson, Kyle J.
    CRITICAL CARE CLINICS, 2024, 40 (03) : 497 - 506
  • [29] Multidisciplinary obstetric critical care delivery: The concept of the "virtual" intensive care unit
    Leovic, Michael P.
    Robbins, Hailey N.
    Starikov, Roman S.
    Foley, Michael R.
    SEMINARS IN PERINATOLOGY, 2018, 42 (01) : 3 - 8
  • [30] IMPLEMENTATION OF CRITICAL CARE CLINICAL PHARMACY SERVICES IN AN ELECTRONIC INTENSIVE CARE UNIT
    Santos-Ferrer, Delany
    Quesep, Natalie
    Vargas, Allison
    DuBouchet, Eduardo Martinez
    Williams, Lisa-Mae
    Lopez-Samblas, Ana
    Clarke, Heidi
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2024, 52