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Beyond Monitors: Intravenous Smart Pump Alarm Fatigue As a Safety Concern.
AACN Advanced Critical CareIntravenous smart pump alarm fatigue remains a persistent and underrecognized patient safety concern in acute and critical care settings. Although alarm fatigue has been traditionally associated with physiological monitors, intravenous smart pumps are ...
B. A. Nyarko, Karen K Giuliano
semanticscholar +1 more source
Improving alarm management to reduce alarm fatigue in critical care: a mixed-methods study.
Intensive & Critical Care NursingBACKGROUND The excessive number of false alarms in the intensive care unit (ICU) environment constitutes a significant clinical issue, contributing to alarm fatigue among medical staff.
K. Lewandowska +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Understanding Nurse Burnout in the Context of Alarm Fatigue.
Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North AmericaBurnout is a pervasive issue in nursing, influenced by factors like patient acuity, nurse-to-patient ratios, and the working environment. Alarm fatigue occurs when high rates of clinical alarms lead to desensitization among staff, creating unsafe patient
Suzannah C. Jennifer Gallaher, S. Wung
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Nursing Critical Care
Alarm fatigue in ICU settings contributes to desensitisation, emotional exhaustion and job burnout, threatening nurse well‐being and patient safety.
Xiao-long Qi +4 more
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Alarm fatigue in ICU settings contributes to desensitisation, emotional exhaustion and job burnout, threatening nurse well‐being and patient safety.
Xiao-long Qi +4 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Towards reducing alarm fatigue
Proceedings of the 10th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction, 2018Everyone who has visited a patient in an intensive care unit will still remember the constant noise emitted from a number of highly sophisticated technical systems. For critical care nurses this creates a working environment in which about 350 alarms per patient are issued and each care taker is responsible for several patients at the same time.
Vanessa Cobus +4 more
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Evaluation of alarm fatigue in nurses working in intensive care units and alarm fatigue
Kastamonu Medical Journal, 2023Aims: This study aimed to investigate alarm fatigue, which has a negative impact on nurses working in intensive care units. Methods: A questionnaire of 20 questions consisting of the alarm fatigue scale in nursing and sociodemographic questions prepared on Google Forms was sent to the nurses working in intensive care units as a social messaging ...
İlkay Ceylan, Ebru Karakoç
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Alarm Fatigue: Causes and Effects
2017The term “Alarm fatigue” is commonly used to describe the effect which a high number of alarms can have on caregivers: Frequent alarms, many of which are avoidable, can lead to inadequate responses, severely impacting patient safety. In the first step of a long-term effort to address this problem, both the direct and indirect impact
Marc, Wilken +5 more
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Critical Care Alarm Fatigue and Monitor Customization: Alarm Frequencies and Context Factors.
Critical Care NurseBACKGROUND Alarm fatigue among nurses working in the intensive care unit has garnered considerable attention as a national patient safety priority. A viable solution for reducing the frequency of alarms and unnecessary noise is intensive care unit alarm ...
Layla Z Arkilic +2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Assessment of Clinical Alarms Influencing Nurses’ Perceptions of Alarm Fatigue
Dimensions of Critical Care Nursing, 2017Background: Excessive clinical alarms have inundated health care for years. Multiple governing bodies, organizations, and facilities have deemed alarm management a priority. Alarm management is a multifaceted problem that affects all health care organizations and clinical staff, especially those in critical care units ...
Emalie M, Petersen, Cindy L, Costanzo
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Journal of Emergency Nursing
INTRODUCTION Frequent and long-term exposure to clinical alarms can cause emergency nurses to lose their trust in alarms, delay their response, and even disable or mute these alarms.
S. Alkubati +10 more
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INTRODUCTION Frequent and long-term exposure to clinical alarms can cause emergency nurses to lose their trust in alarms, delay their response, and even disable or mute these alarms.
S. Alkubati +10 more
semanticscholar +1 more source

