Critical Illness Clinical Trial
Official title:
Optimized Admission to the Intensive Care Unit by Using Crisis Resource Management (CRM)
Admission to the intensive care unit (ICU) is vital for surviving critical illness. An admission to ICU without having a consistent structure, structured review of the patient and a solid team organization lead to unclear communication and responsibility. Factors that correlate with patient acceptance and safety, morbidity and mortality. The hypothesize was that a structured admission can improve patients safety, reduce delays in treatment, reduce ICU length of stay, and improve mortality rate. The overall objective was to optimize patient safety, and effectively use available resources to reduce admission time, delays in treatment and procedures and mortality by using both quantitative and qualitative methods.
The quantitative before-data is a one-year observational period prior to the intervention
measured by different perspectives; patients and staff outcomes.
After the intervention, was qualititive data collected from participants, who received
simulation training.
The quantitative after-data is a one-year observational period post-intervention with same
outcomes as before starting the intervention.
Data is already collected registry data from hospital quality assurance board. Data will be
compared before and after with assessor blinded analysis. Missing data will not be replaced
but reported as missing.
The investigators will try to compare the results with data from an approximately comparative
ICU in Denmark due to the implementation of a new patient management system called the Health
Portal.
The statistical analysis plan is based on descriptive and comparative analyses of the group
before and after the trial. The quantitative results are explained in in-depths description
from participants.
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