Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2765117 | Journal of Critical Care | 2013 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
We conducted a qualitative study using semistructured interviews. Sixty-one tele-ICU staff from 5 tele-ICUs participated in the study. We performed inductive content analysis and coded 722 pieces of text into 19 positive and 9 negative/neutral tele-ICU contributions to care processes and patient outcomes. We found that availability of extra resources can reduce on mortality and length of stay, that a tele-ICU could serve as a quality trigger to improve evidence-based medicine compliance, that tele-ICU can support medication management and improve medication safety, and that tele-ICU software alerts and monitoring by camera can help reduce the risk of patient falls and extubations. We also found that tele-ICU physicians can make poor care decisions leading to medication errors if they lack patient-related information. Moreover, the tele-ICU has no impact on patient care processes and outcomes when the technology is not accepted and used by ICU staff.
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Authors
Adjhaporn PhD, Pascale PhD,