DocumentCode
2040589
Title
Alarms on the Intensive Cardiac Care Unit
Author
Lipton, J.A. ; van Ettinger, M.J.B. ; Barendse, R.J. ; van Dam, T.B. ; van der Putten, N.H.J.J. ; Nelwan, S.P.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Cardiology, Erasmus Med. Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands
fYear
2009
fDate
13-16 Sept. 2009
Firstpage
253
Lastpage
256
Abstract
Patients admitted to the Intensive Cardiac Care Unit are closely monitored by different devices that generate alarms when an abnormality is detected. However, most alarms do not signify a life-threatening event. During a four month period 34,827 alarms were collected electronically. The most frequent alarm categories were related to mechanical ventilation (42.2%), blood pressure (32.3%), electrocardiogram (9.8%) and heart rate (8.1%). 2750 (7.9%) of the alarms were not related to limit violations, but were technical advisories. Overall alarm frequency was 2.2 per patient per hour. However, the distribution over time varied greatly and alarm ¿bursts¿ were seen when blood samples were taken and patients were woken. Reduction in alarms could be achieved by reducing overuse of monitoring parameters, utilizing patient specific limits and combining alarms within the ¿bursts¿.
Keywords
blood; cardiology; electrocardiography; patient monitoring; ventilation; blood pressure; cardiac care; electrocardiogram; heart rate; mechanical ventilation; monitoring parameters; Biomedical monitoring; Blood pressure; Cardiology; Condition monitoring; Costs; Frequency; Heart rate; Manufacturing; Patient monitoring; Ventilation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computers in Cardiology, 2009
Conference_Location
Park City, UT
ISSN
0276-6547
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-7281-9
Electronic_ISBN
0276-6547
Type
conf
Filename
5445423
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