Clinical practice, decision-making, and use of clinical decision support systems in invasive mechanical ventilation: a narrative review.
Br J Anaesth
; 133(1): 164-177, 2024 Jul.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38637268
ABSTRACT
Invasive mechanical ventilation is a key supportive therapy for patients on intensive care. There is increasing emphasis on personalised ventilation strategies. Clinical decision support systems (CDSS) have been developed to support this. We conducted a narrative review to assess evidence that could inform device implementation. A search was conducted in MEDLINE (Ovid) and EMBASE. Twenty-nine studies met the inclusion criteria. Role allocation is well described, with interprofessional collaboration dependent on culture, nursepatient ratio, the use of protocols, and perception of responsibility. There were no descriptions of process measures, quality metrics, or clinical workflow. Nurse-led weaning is well-described, with factors grouped by patient, nurse, and system. Physician-led weaning is heterogenous, guided by subjective and objective information, and 'gestalt'. No studies explored decision-making with CDSS. Several explored facilitators and barriers to implementation, grouped by clinician (facilitators confidence using CDSS, retaining decision-making ownership; barriers undermining clinician's role, ambiguity moving off protocol), intervention (facilitators user-friendly interface, ease of workflow integration, minimal training requirement; barriers increased documentation time), and organisation (facilitators system-level mandate; barriers poor communication, inconsistent training, lack of technical support). One study described factors that support CDSS implementation. There are gaps in our understanding of ventilation practice. A coordinated approach grounded in implementation science is required to support CDSS implementation. Future research should describe factors that guide clinical decision-making throughout mechanical ventilation, with and without CDSS, map clinical workflow, and devise implementation toolkits. Novel research design analogous to a learning organisation, that considers the commercial aspects of device design, is required.
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Texto completo:
1
Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Respiração Artificial
/
Sistemas de Apoio a Decisões Clínicas
/
Tomada de Decisão Clínica
Limite:
Humans
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2024
Tipo de documento:
Article