Impact of a Multifaceted Intervention of Environment Control in the ICU to Optimize Quantity and Quality of Sleep
Sleep Disturbance
About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Sleep Disturbance focused on measuring ICU, Environment control, Critically ill patients, Adult, Multifaceted intervention
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Patient under invasive mechanical ventilation for at least 72 hours. Patient without sedation or with superficial sedation level (SAS 3-4 by Sedation- Agitation Scale), during most of the daytime within the 24 previous hours Exclusion Criteria: Patient who required mechanical ventilation in another episode of hospitalization in the 2 months before screening. Patients with primary neurological or neurosurgical disease. Presence of mental or intellectual disability prior to hospitalization or communication/language barriers. Pre-existing comorbidity with a life expectancy not exceeding 6 months (eg, metastatic cancer). Readmission to the ICU (patients can only be included if they are on their first ICU admission of the present hospitalization). No fixed address for follow-up. Patients with moderate to severe visual or hearing impairment. Patients with known sleep disturbance before hospital admission. Early limitation of therapeutic effort.
Sites / Locations
- Hospital Clínico UC CHRISTUSRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
Multifaceted Intervention
Standard Care
Lighting: a multi-channel LED Spectrum will be implemented. The spectral output covers the wavelength range from 420 nm to 730 nm. All active channels are mixed, providing a smooth (uniform in color) light with a Lambertian pattern profile. Noise: the auditory masking system will provide a continuous background digitally generated broadband pink noise. The sound system will be placed near the head of the bed. This will be started (at 62 DB sound level) each night for 8 hours. Nocturnal patient care activities: night-time patient care activities will be re-organized to minimize interruptions. The medication administration schedule will be organized, and the vital signs monitoring will be done continuously by medical devices without requiring to disturb the patient. Hygiene, comfort, and elective activities will be scheduled for the daytime. Emergency interventions will not be limited.
Lighting: standard lighting system currently installed in the ICU rooms provides a fix light of 300 to 400 lux during daytime, and 0 to 30 lux during night-time. Controls depends on staff to switched on and off. Noise: The rooms do not have noise isolation and there is no protocol for reducing environmental noise. In our ICU, isolated measurements reported mean average values of 60 dB during daytime and 50 dB during nighttime, with frequent peaks over 80 to 90 dB. Nocturnal patient care activities: There is no specific protocol for patient care activities during the night. The activities (schedules of drug administration and intravenous infusions, non-urgent examinations, and non-urgent procedures) are organized during the morning by the patient's nurse according to their own clinical criteria. Hygiene and comfort activities are carried out in standard schedules according to the rules of the ICU. Drug administration, examinations and urgent procedures are performed when necessary.