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Clinical alarms and alarm fatigue in a University Hospital Emergency Department—A retrospective data analysis

Juho O. Jämsä, K. Uutela, Anna‐Maija Tapper, Lasse Lehtonen

2021Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Background Alarm fatigue is hypothesized to be caused by vast amount of patient monitor alarms. Objectives were to study the frequency and types of patient monitor alarms, to evaluate alarm fatigue, and to find unit specific alarm threshold values in a university hospital emergency department. Methods We retrospectively gathered alarm data from 9 September to 6 October 2019, in Jorvi Hospital Emergency department, Finland. The department treats surgical, internal and general medicine patients aged 16 and older. The number of patients is on average 4600 to 5000 per month. Eight out of 46 monitors were used for data gathering and the monitored modalities included electrocardiography, respiratory rate, blood pressure, and pulse oximetry. Results Total number of alarms in the study monitors was 28 176. Number of acknowledged alarms (ie acknowledgement indicator pressed in the monitor) was 695 (2.5%). The most common alarm types were: Respiratory rate high, 9077 (32.2%), pulse oximetry low, 4572 (16.2%) and pulse oximetry probe off, 4036 (14.3%). Number of alarms with duration under 10 s was 14 936 (53%). Number of individual alarm sounds was 105 000, 469 per monitor per day. Of respiratory rate high alarms, 2846 (31.4%) had initial value below 30 breaths min −1 . Of pulse oximetry low alarms, 2421 (53.0%) had initial value above 88%. Conclusions Alarm sound load, from individual alarm sounds, was nearly continuous in an emergency department observation room equipped with nine monitors. Intervention by the staff to the alarms was infrequent. More than half of the alarms were momentary.

Topics & Concepts

ALARMMedicinePulse oximetryEmergency departmentEmergency medicineRespiratory rateMedical emergencyHeart rateBlood pressureAnesthesiaInternal medicineNursingComposite materialMaterials scienceHealthcare Technology and Patient MonitoringIntensive Care Unit Cognitive DisordersNon-Invasive Vital Sign Monitoring
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