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Sleep Quality in Surgical Intensive Care

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Nursing Care
Intensive Care Unit ICU
Sleep Quality
Registration Number
NCT06973252
Lead Sponsor
Aydin Adnan Menderes University
Brief Summary

It is thought that transferring low-cost and easily applicable interventions that can be used to control environmental stressors such as noise and light that negatively affect sleep quality, especially in intensive care environments, into clinical practice will improve the quality of nursing care. It is recommended that complementary interventions that can be used to improve such sleep quality should be tested and supported by new studies. In this study, it was aimed to determine the effect of eye mask on sleep quality in patients admitted to the surgical intensive care unit after abdominal surgery.

Detailed Description

Sleep is one of the basic needs to maintain and protect health and is a physiological state that occurs as a result of loss of consciousness, slowing of muscle activities, and decrease in neural activity for a certain period of time. Sleep quality is adversely affected as a result of physiological or psychological factors occurring in the perioperative period or disruptions in normal sleep phases due to environmental factors such as light and noise in the intensive care environment. Especially in surgical intensive care units (SICU), it is one of the units where deterioration in the sleep quality of patients is frequently experienced.

It is reported that improving sleep quality in intensive care units will support the recovery processes of patients in the clinical environment and shorten the duration of hospital stay. Non-pharmacological methods are frequently used in patients hospitalised in the intensive care unit. In the literature, there are research results on the positive effects of using eye patch and earplugs, listening to audio books, massage and aromatherapy, acupressure, music therapy, white noise application, reflexology massage and foot bath interventions on sleep quality.

Sleep is an important component of nursing management in surgical intensive care units and is one of the basic needs of patients. Surgical nurses who provide nursing care here should plan, implement and evaluate environmental arrangements and non-pharmacological interventions to improve the sleep quality of patients. Especially interventions such as eye mask can be used to control the environmental factor that negatively affects sleep quality in surgical intensive care units. In systematic reviews and meta-analyses on the method of sleep in intensive care unit patients, it is reported that the use of eye mask improves sleep quality, but more studies are needed to increase the quality of evidence. It is thought that transferring low-cost and easily applicable interventions that can be used to control environmental stressors such as noise and light that negatively affect sleep quality, especially in intensive care environments, into clinical practice will improve the quality of nursing care.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
64
Inclusion Criteria
  • had undergone abdominal surgery
  • over 18 years of age,
  • who speak Turkish,
  • who have not received any diagnosis related to mental health,
  • who are open to communication and co-operation
  • Patients who voluntarily agreed to participate in the study
Exclusion Criteria
  • patients with a history of neurological or psychiatric disorders
  • patients with any eye disease
  • patients who are unable or unwilling to wear an eye mask

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Sleep statusOn the 3rd postoperative day

This form was developed by the researcher using the literature on the subject. The form was filled in based on the self-report of the patients. In order to determine the sleep status of the patients, the form included 5 statements: 'I feel tired and sleepy during the day despite sleeping for a sufficient amount of time', 'I have difficulty falling asleep 2-3 nights a week', 'I have to constantly move my legs in bed', 'I have to go to the toilet at least once during the night', 'I wake up tired and with a headache in the morning'.

Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale (RASS) ScorePostoperative 1st, 2nd and 3rd days

It is a ten-level scale developed by Cook and Palma (1989) in which eye contact, which is not present in other scales, is evaluated following the verbal stimulus. In the scale, a score of '0' indicates the ideal level where the patient is awake and calm, while values up to '+4' reflect increasing agitation and values up to '-5' reflect increasing sedation level. As the scale score increases, it is interpreted as the agitation status of the patients worsens.

Richard-Campbell Sleep Scale (RCS) ScorePostoperative 1st, 2nd and 3rd days

Richard-Campbell Sleep Scale (RCS): In 1987, the Turkish validity and reliability study of the scale was conducted by Richards in 2015 by Özlü and Özer. The scale consists of 6 items evaluating sleep quality, depth of sleep at night, frequency of awakening, ambient sound level, time of staying awake and time to fall asleep. Each item is evaluated on a scale ranging from 0 to 100. A score between '0-25' indicates very poor sleep and a score between '76-100' indicates very good sleep. As the scale score increases, patients' It is interpreted that sleep quality has increased.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Aydın Adnan Menderes University

🇹🇷

Aydın, Zafer Mahallesi, Turkey

Aydın Adnan Menderes University
🇹🇷Aydın, Zafer Mahallesi, Turkey

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