Evaluating Pain, Sedation, and Delirium in the Neurologically Critically Ill—Feasibility and Reliability of Standardized Tools

Jul 19, 2013Critical care medicine

Using standard tools to measure pain, sedation, and confusion in critically ill brain patients: testing reliability across hospitals

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Abstract

151 patients underwent 439 assessments, demonstrating excellent inter-rater reliability for pain and sedation evaluations.

  • Pain and sedation evaluations showed high reliability with intraclass correlation coefficients of 0.92 for the numeric rating scale and 0.83 for the behavioral pain scale.
  • Delirium screening was feasible in 75% of patients assessed, with good agreement among evaluators on the Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist items.
  • Concordance for the checklist items produced kappa coefficients ranging from 0.58 to 0.91.
  • Orientation, hallucinations, and speech or mood content were the most frequently non-evaluable items during delirium screening.
  • A 10% increase in ICU length of stay was associated with each additional delirium checklist item present.

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Full Text

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