Critical Illness Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Alternative Attending Physician Staffing Models on Outcomes for Intensive Care Unit Patients, Families, and Health Care Workers
Verified date | June 2010 |
Source | University of Manitoba |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Canada: Ethics Review Committee |
Study type | Observational |
Intensive Care Units (ICU) are an important, but troubled, part of modern health care
systems. While it seems likely that both the technical and structural elements of ICU care
are important determinants of relevant ICU outcomes, little is known about how the structure
of ICU care affects outcomes. One element of potential importance is the way that ICU
physicians (intensivists) organize themselves to provide ICU care, particularly at night.
The dominant, historical ("standard") model of intensivist staffing involves an intensivist
who is present during daytime hours, but then takes "call" at night from home. But, in
recent years there has been widespread concern about whether patients experience adverse
events or worse outcomes related to a lesser level of expertise and care readily available
at night in hospitals. Only two studies, both from single ICUs, and both using simple before
vs. after study designs, have conducted interventional studies directly comparing a
"standard" intensivist staffing model with a "24-7" model of nighttime intensivist coverage
via shift work, i.e. with the daytime intensivist giving way at the late afternoon to a
nightshift intensivist who remained in the hospital and covered the ICU until morning. Those
two studies found contradictory effects of the intervention. But despite the absence of
clear data indicating a benefit to ICU patients associated with having intensivists remain
in the hospital overnight, there has been a major movement around the world towards ICU
staffing models utilizing shift work to ensure such coverage. The potential impact of such a
change in staffing paradigm is large, with possible effects on all the other major
stakeholders involved in ICU care: families, nurses, and house officers. Both benefits and
detriments are possible.
On the one hand, moving to a shift work model from a model in which a single intensivist
becomes overworked and sleep-deprived as a result of being responsible for care both day and
night, has the potential to reduce the sleep deprivation, job distress, and burnout
prevalent among intensivists with standard staffing models. But, it would also require more
intensivists, a serious challenge given the worsening intensivist manpower shortage. Also,
there are many detrimental effects of shift work on humans, including negative effects on
motor function, cognition, sleep, job satisfaction, mood, errors, and cardiovascular health.
Shift work is the most common reason that Emergency Medicine physicians give for leaving
that field. The physical availability of an intensivist around-the-clock might also
influence the problems mentioned of family dissatisfaction with communication in ICUs, and
poor communication/ teamwork with physicians often perceived by ICU nurses. In ICUs of
teaching hospitals, where relatively inexperienced house officers typically remain in the
ICU overnight, the nighttime presence of an attending physician might influence residents'
perceptions of domains such as teaching, and clinical autonomy.
This purpose of this study is to rigorously compare the effects of two different intensivist
staffing models, specifically the current standard model, and a 24-7 staffing model enabled
via shift work. This study will be conducted in two ICUs, one academic with house officers
who remain in ICU overnight (the Medical ICU at Health Sciences Center), and one in a
community hospital which currently lacks overnight, in-ICU physicians (the Victoria General
Hospital).
This study is designed to improve upon both prior studies. To obviate the problems with
using historical controls inherent in those before-vs-after study designs, our study will
alternate the two staffing models (e.g. A-B-A-B). Also, the investigators will rigorously
assess the effect of 24 hour intensivist presence on all major stakeholders, i.e. patients,
families, intensivists, nurses, and house officers.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 627 |
Est. completion date | June 2009 |
Est. primary completion date | June 2009 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 17 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - ICU admission contained entirely within the period of a single intensivist staffing format during the study period. Exclusion Criteria: - Repeat ICU admissions during the study period - ICU admissions that overlapped more than one intensivist staffing format during the study period |
Observational Model: Ecologic or Community, Time Perspective: Prospective
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Victoria General Hospital | Winnipeg | Manitoba |
Canada | Winnipeg Health Sciences Centre | Winnipeg | Manitoba |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Manitoba | St. Boniface General Hospital Research Centre |
Canada,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Emotional Exhaustion subscale of the Maslach Burnout Inventory, among intensivists | Reference: Maslach, C., W. B. Schaufeli, and M. P. Leiter. 2001. Job Burnout. Annual Review of Psychology 52:397-422. | 1 week | No |
Secondary | Home-work imbalance, among intensivists | Reference: Kopelman, R. E., J. H. Greenhaus, and T. F. Connolly. 1983. A Model of Work, Family, and Interrole Conflict: A Construct Validation Study. Organizational Behavior and Human Performance 32:198-215. | 1 week | No |
Secondary | Role overload, among intensivists | Reference: Bacharach, S. B., P. Bamberger, and S. C. Conley. 1990. Work Processes, Role Conflict, and Role Overload: The Case of Nurses and Engineers in the Public Sector. Work and Occupations 17(2):199-228. | 1 week | No |
Secondary | Role ambiguity, among intensivists | Reference: Peterson, M. F., P. B. Smith, A. Akande, and e. al. 1995. Role Conflict, Ambiguity, and Overload: A 21-Nation Study. Academy of Management Journal 38(2):429-452. | 1 week | No |
Secondary | Role conflict, among intensivists | A 3 item scale we developed for assessing conflict occurring at the interface between 2 intensivists doing shift-work, and thus caring for the same patients. | 1 week | No |
Secondary | ICU mortality, among ICU patients | Obtained from the Winnipeg ICU database. | up to 32 weeks | Yes |
Secondary | Hospital mortality, among ICU patients | Obtained from the hospital charts of the two participating hospitals. | up to 1 year | Yes |
Secondary | ICU length of stay, among ICU patients | Obtained from the Winnipeg ICU database. | up to 32 weeks | No |
Secondary | Hospital length of stay, among ICU patients | Obtained from the hospital charts of the two participating hospitals. | up to 1 year | No |
Secondary | Satisfaction with care, among families of ICU patients | Reference: Wall, R. J., R. A. Engelberg, L. Downey, D. K. Heyland, and J. R. Curtis. 2007. Refinement, scoring, and validation of the Family Satisfaction in the Intensive Care Unit (FS-ICU) survey. Critical Care Medicine 35(1):271-279. | up to 32 weeks | No |
Secondary | Satisfaction with decision-making, among families of ICU patients | Reference: Wall, R. J., R. A. Engelberg, L. Downey, D. K. Heyland, and J. R. Curtis. 2007. Refinement, scoring, and validation of the Family Satisfaction in the Intensive Care Unit (FS-ICU) survey. Critical Care Medicine 35(1):271-279. | up to 32 weeks | No |
Secondary | Nurse-physician collaboration, as perceived by ICU nurses | Reference: Baggs, J. G. 1994. Development of an instrument to measure collaboration and satisfaction about care decisions. Journal of Advanced Nursing 20(1):176-182. | 8 weeks | No |
Secondary | Satisfaction with communications, as perceived by ICU nurses | Reference: Shortell, S. M., D. M. Rousseau, R. R. Gillies, K. J. Devers, and T. L. Simons. 1991. Organizational assessment in intensive care units: Construct development, reliability, and validity of the ICU nurse-physician questionnaire. Medical Care 29(8):709-27. | 8 weeks | No |
Secondary | Nurse-physician understanding, as perceived by ICU nurses | Reference: Shortell, S. M., D. M. Rousseau, R. R. Gillies, K. J. Devers, and T. L. Simons. 1991. Organizational assessment in intensive care units: Construct development, reliability, and validity of the ICU nurse-physician questionnaire. Medical Care 29(8):709-27. | 8 weeks | No |
Secondary | Shift Communication, as perceived by ICU nurses | Reference: Shortell, S. M., D. M. Rousseau, R. R. Gillies, K. J. Devers, and T. L. Simons. 1991. Organizational assessment in intensive care units: Construct development, reliability, and validity of the ICU nurse-physician questionnaire. Medical Care 29(8):709-27. | 8 weeks | No |
Secondary | Role conflict, as perceived by ICU nurses | Reference: Peterson, M. F., P. B. Smith, A. Akande, and e. al. 1995. Role Conflict, Ambiguity, and Overload: A 21-Nation Study. Academy of Management Journal 38(2):429-452. | 8 weeks | No |
Secondary | Autonomy, as perceived by ICU house officers | Reference: Fields, D. L. 2002. Taking the Measure of Work; A Guide to Validated Scales for Organizational Research and Diagnosis. Sage Publications, Thousand Oaks | 4 weeks | No |
Secondary | Role conflict, as perceived by ICU house officers | Reference: Peterson, M. F., P. B. Smith, A. Akande, and e. al. 1995. Role Conflict, Ambiguity, and Overload: A 21-Nation Study. Academy of Management Journal 38(2):429-452. | 4 weeks | No |
Secondary | Clinical comfort, as perceived by ICU house officers | Reference: Carson, S. S., C. Stocking, R. Podsadecki, J. Christenson, A. Pohlman, S. MacRae, J. Jordan, H. Humphrey, M. Siegler, and J. Hall. 1996. Effects of organizational change in the medical intensive care unit of a teaching hospital. JAMA 276(4):322-328 | 4 weeks | No |
Secondary | Education/learning, as perceived by ICU house officers. | Reference: Carson, S. S., C. Stocking, R. Podsadecki, J. Christenson, A. Pohlman, S. MacRae, J. Jordan, H. Humphrey, M. Siegler, and J. Hall. 1996. Effects of organizational change in the medical intensive care unit of a teaching hospital. JAMA 276(4):322-328 | 4 weeks | No |
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