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Surveillance Monitoring on General Wards

Completed
Conditions
Cardiac Arrest
Registration Number
NCT03271216
Lead Sponsor
Johns Hopkins University
Brief Summary

This is a study to determine if surveillance monitoring of general ward patients can reduce cardio-pulmonary arrest while maintaining an acceptable false alarms rate for nursing workload.

Detailed Description

The investigators placed a wired monitoring system (pulse oximetry, heart rate and respiratory rate) on every patient who arrived on a subject general post surgical ward who assented to wear the system. this was the Masimo PSNET system using the Radical 87 monitor and an acoustic respiratory sensor along with a Masimo pulse oximetry probe. Patients were monitored for a minimum of 48 hrs. Heart Rate (HR) parameters were set between 45-130, Respiratory rate was set between 6-20 and pulse oximetrry was 85-100%. Nurses documented in the Electronic Medical Record (EMR) any alarms they responded to as to whether they were false (vital sign not out of range when rechecked) or true and what the response was. Responses ranged from nurse managed to notification of primary service to Rapid Response Activation to Code team activation as well as transfer to a higher level of care (operating room or Intensive Care Unit (ICU)/IMC. Patient and Nursing satisfaction surveys were collected.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
422
Inclusion Criteria
  • all post-surgical patients admitted to a post-operative general hospital ward
Exclusion Criteria
  • inability to understand English or provide verbal consent for data analysis

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
positive predictive value (PPV)6 months

The PPV of the wired monitoring system (pulse oximetry, heart rate and respiratory rate) will be determined based on change in vital signs (HR\<45 or \>130, RR\<6 or \>20 and pulse oximetry \<85) indicating clinical deterioration

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
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