RESUMO
This research aims to describe the perspectives of health care professionals, patients, and family members regarding spiritual care options in intensive care units (ICUs). Participants were recruited consecutively from January to August 2019, during which time data collection was conducted. A total of 1211 Spanish-language questionnaires were collected from 41 ICUs in Spain and Latin America. Approximately 655 participants worked as ICU professionals (74.5% of these participants were women, and 47.5% were nurses). Additionally, 340 questionnaires were sent to patients' families, and patients completed 216 questionnaires; 59.7% of these participants were men, and their mean age was 59.4 years. Most (69.7%) of the critical care professionals considered this type of care to be a part of their profession, 50.1% did not feel competent to provide this type of care, and 83.4% felt that training in this area was necessary. Most families (71.7%) and patients (60.2%) felt that spiritual suffering occurred during their stay in the ICU. The results of this study suggest a perceived deficit in spiritual care in ICUs.
Assuntos
Terapias Espirituais , Espiritualidade , Masculino , Humanos , Feminino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Espanha , América Latina , Cuidados CríticosRESUMO
INTRODUCTION: Due to the favourable impact of removing the sinks on isolations in bronchoaspirate samples of patients with mechanical ventilation, we now evaluate the impact on the consumption of antibiotics as well as on the results of the Zero Resistance Project (ZRP). PATIENTS AND METHODS: All the patients admitted to the unit in a quasi-experimental before-after study with a pre-intervention period between 2014 and 2016 and a post-intervention period from 2016 to 2017, to evaluate antibiotic consumption in defined daily doses, and until 2018, to evaluate the ZRP indicators. The intervention was the removal of the sinks from the rooms of the ICU. We evaluated antibiotic consumption densities and their ratios, grouped as Enterobacteriaceae and non-fermenting gram-negative bacilli (NFGNB) according to their antibiograms; the absolute number of 'antibiotic days', 'hospitalised days', 'isolation days', and 'multi-resistant bacteria (MRB) days'; as well as their incidence densities per 1000 hospitalised days and the ratio between the two years prior to and the two years after the intervention. RESULTS: Post-intervention antibiotic use was 1.61-fold (1.60-1.62) and 2.24-fold (2.10-2.37) lower for antibiotics used against Enterobacteriaceae and NFGNB, respectively. There were also reductions in the number of days of antibiotic use by 1.29-fold (1.22-1.36), number of MRB days by 1.84-fold (1.63-2.08), and number of patient isolation days by 1.51-fold (1.38-1.66). DISCUSSION: The results suggest that the intervention had a favourable impact on the consumption of antibiotics, as well as on the number of days on antibiotics, MRB, and isolation.