Education Clinical Trial
— InCURSOfficial title:
Intensive Care Unit Resident Scheduling Trial
NCT number | NCT04176094 |
Other study ID # | 1744 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Recruiting |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | November 18, 2019 |
Est. completion date | June 2026 |
Many patients, doctors and others worry that tired doctors provide worse patient care, may not learn well and become burnt-out. In response to these concerns, some countries changed their laws to limit work-hours for doctors in training ('residents'). In Canada, most residents work six or seven 24-30h shifts each month. A recent Canadian report ordered by Health Canada said that making good decisions about resident work-hour rules was "significantly limited by quality evidence, especially evidence directly attributable to the Canadian context." Creating this evidence is the main goal of this research. The pilot study in 2 intensive care units(ICU) found that shorter shifts may be worse for patients, and for residents were more tiring than expected but improved wellbeing. Learning was not assessed. Previous studies on resident work-hours report similar findings: conflicting effects for patients, benefits for resident wellbeing, inconsistent and under-studied effects on learning. Overall, these results are not conclusive and confirm the need for a larger study. The current study will provide high-quality Canadian evidence. The investigators will compare two common ICU schedules used in Canada: resident shifts of 16h and 24h. ICU patients are very sick, there is little margin for error: they need doctors who know them well and are thinking clearly. The effects of each schedule on patients and residents will be measured. For patients, mortality rates and harm caused by care in ICU will be studied. For resident education, their learning about managing common illnesses in ICU, to do basic ICU procedures, and communicate with families will be studied. For resident wellbeing measures will include sleepiness, other fatigue symptoms, and burnout. Investigators will study both resident and patient outcomes so that Canadians can understand trade-offs linked to changing schedules. With this knowledge, Canadians can expect safer care for today's patients and better-trained doctors for the patients of tomorrow.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 20 |
Est. completion date | June 2026 |
Est. primary completion date | March 2026 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria for ICUs: - Admit adult patients (=18 years); - Are anticipated to have sufficient rotating residents from Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada -accredited training programs to provide overnight in-house coverage for at least 20 overnight periods in 28 days; and - Are willing to participate in the study (schedule randomization, measurements). Inclusion Criteria for Patients: • Patients admitted to ICU during either period of the study. Inclusion Criteria for Residents: - Are enrolled in an accredited specialty training program of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (internal or emergency medicine, surgery, anaesthesia, other, but not critical care medicine), - Are able to perform overnight in-house duty with supervision from critical care trainees and intensivists, and - Have the first 4 weeks of their ICU rotation entirely in one period. Residents who have participated in the study previously will not complete the competency assessments, however will be eligible to participate in the wellbeing and description of learning activities. Inclusion Criteria for Supervisors: • Are Physicians responsible for the supervision of residents and other trainees in the ICU, and include Critical Care Trainees and Staff Physicians. Inclusion Criteria for ICU frontline staff: • Are Registered nurses, registered respiratory therapists, pharmacists, social workers, physiotherapists and occupational therapists, who provide care in the ICU. Exclusion Criteria for ICUs: - ICUs with no rotating residents performing overnight in-house duty. - ICUs that are anticipating a major change in ICU staffing (e.g. in-house intensivist added or removed, in-house fellow added or removed) or - Are unwilling to have either resident schedule randomized, to provide study measurements or both. Exclusion Criteria for Patients: • Patients will be excluded if they are in the ICU at the start of a study period. Exclusion Criteria for Residents: - Residents enrolled in a critical care medicine accredited specialty training program, - Who are not able to perform overnight in-house duty, - Where the first 4 weeks of their ICU rotation are not in one period, - Where the length of their ICU rotation is less than 4 week. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Mount Sinai Hospital | Toronto | Ontario |
Canada | St Michael's Hospital | Toronto | Ontario |
Canada | Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre | Toronto | Ontario |
Canada | Toronto General Hospital | Toronto | Ontario |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
The Hospital for Sick Children | Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre |
Canada,
Parshuram CS, Amaral AC, Ferguson ND, Baker GR, Etchells EE, Flintoft V, Granton J, Lingard L, Kirpalani H, Mehta S, Moldofsky H, Scales DC, Stewart TE, Willan AR, Friedrich JO; Canadian Critical Care Trials Group. Patient safety, resident well-being and continuity of care with different resident duty schedules in the intensive care unit: a randomized trial. CMAJ. 2015 Mar 17;187(5):321-9. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.140752. Epub 2015 Feb 9. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Rate of Patient ICU Re-admission | Patient ICU Re-admission within 48hrs of ICU discharge. | 48 hours post-ICU discharge | |
Other | Rate of Patient Treated Cardiac Arrest | Documented cessation of circulation. Cardiac compressions and/or defibrillation provided in the ICU.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
During ICU stay and up to 3 days post ICU discharge | |
Other | Rate of Patient Bleeding | Major new bleed with laboratory evidence and requiring transfusion. Clinically important minor new bleed (not requiring transfusion).
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
During ICU stay and up to 3 days post ICU discharge | |
Other | Rate of Patient Thrombosis/Embolism | New, documented thrombosis or embolism confirmed with imaging. The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). | During ICU stay and up to 3 days post ICU discharge | |
Other | Rate of Patient Cutaneous Injury | Documented new cutaneous injury requiring start or modification of treatment. The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). | During ICU stay and up to 3 days post ICU discharge | |
Other | Rate of Patient Acquired Neurologic Injury | Documented new neurologic injury (motor/sensory deficit) and brain/spine imaging showing ischemic/haemorrhagic injury or documented peripheral nerve injury diagnosed by nerve testing/clinical examination.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
During ICU stay and up to 3 days post ICU discharge | |
Other | Rate of Patient Central Line or Endotracheal Tube Loss | Unplanned loss of central line, arterial line, endotracheal tube, chest tube or Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenator therapy cannula.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
During ICU stay and up to 3 days post ICU discharge | |
Other | Rate of Patient Adverse Drug Events | Documented or suspected drug-related event. Drug(s) administered during ICU admission.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
During ICU stay and up to 3 days post ICU discharge | |
Other | Rate of Patient Acquired Infection | diagnosis of infection, documented infection (positive culture), antibiotics started/changed and continued for at least 3 days or until death.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
During ICU stay and up to 3 days post ICU discharge | |
Other | ICU Resource Utilization: Length of Stay | Number of whole or part calendar days a patient spends in the ICU. The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). | Measured daily from the date of ICU admission to the date of ICU discharge for each enrolled patient. Estimated average is 7 days. | |
Other | ICU Resource Utilization: Duration of Mechanical Ventilation | Number of whole or part calendar days of mechanical ventilation a patient received while in the ICU.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
From the date of a patients ICU admission to the date of that patient's ICU discharge. Estimated average is 7 days. | |
Other | ICU Resource Utilization: Duration of Acute dialysis | Number of whole or part calendar days of acute dialysis a patient received while in the ICU.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
From the date of a patients ICU admission to the date of that patient's ICU discharge. Estimated average is 7 days. | |
Other | ICU Resource Utilization: Duration of Inhaled Pulmonary Vasodilators | Number of whole or part calendar days of inhaled pulmonary vasodilators a patient received while in the ICU.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
From the date of a patients ICU admission to the date of that patient's ICU discharge. Estimated average is 7 days. | |
Other | ICU Resource Utilization: Duration of Mechanical Circulatory Support | Number of whole or part calendar days of mechanical circulatory support a patient received while in the ICU.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
From the date of a patients ICU admission to the date of that patient's ICU discharge. Estimated average is 7 days. | |
Other | ICU Resource Utilization: Duration of Inotrope-vasoactive therapy | Number of whole or part calendar days of inotrope-vasoactive therapy a patient received while in the ICU.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
From the date of a patients ICU admission to the date of that patient's ICU discharge. Estimated average is 7 days. | |
Other | ICU Resource Utilization: Duration of non-invasive mechanical ventilation | Number of whole or part calendar days of non-invasive mechanical ventilation therapy a patient received while in the ICU.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
From the date of a patients ICU admission to the date of that patient's ICU discharge. Estimated average is 7 days. | |
Other | Resident Daily Activities | Residents will be asked to indicate the learning activities they participated in while on duty.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
Twice per week during the first 4 weeks of a residents ICU rotation | |
Other | Resident Wellbeing: Weekly Description | Weekly questionnaire to describe the number of times residents were: exposed to bodily fluids, were the subject of inappropriate personal comments, received physical threats.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
During the first 4 weeks of a residents ICU rotation | |
Other | Resident Perception of Learning Climate | End-of-rotation survey using the Dutch Residency Educational Climate Test. The Dutch Residency Educational Climate Test is to describe the resident's opinion regarding: Educational atmosphere, teamwork, role of ICU attending physicians, coaching and assessments, resident peer collaboration, adaptability of work to resident's competence, accessibility of supervisors, formal education and patient site out. Each section will be rated from 1= strongly disagree to 5=strongly agree. The higher the score, the better the learning climate. The maximum score is 175 the minimum score is 35. | Week 4 of ICU rotation | |
Other | Duration of Resident sleep | On-duty sleep, pre-duty sleep, post-duty sleep measured in hours and minutes by actigraphy | During 7 days of the ICU rotation | |
Other | Rate of Resident Needle Stick Injuries | Weekly questionnaire to describe the number of times residents experienced a needle-stick injury or other unintended bodily fluid exposure.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
During 4 weeks of ICU | |
Other | Resident Motor Vehicle Collisions | Weekly questionnaire to capture the number of times residents were experienced crashes/near crashes.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
Each Week of ICU rotation. Average duration 4 weeks. | |
Other | Supervising Physician Workload | Survey of supervising staff perceived workload will be completed twice per week. Questions include the number of times the supervising staff communicated with the resident during overnight duty, their departure time from the ICU, and the number of times they returned to ICU overnight.
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
Twice per week for duration of the study for 2 years at each site. | |
Other | Supervising Physician Perceptions of resident performance | Survey of supervising staff perceived resident performance (quality of diagnosis, quality of management and occurrence of medical errors).
The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). |
Twice per week for duration of the study for 2 years at each site. | |
Other | Amount of Sleep in last 12 hours. | Residents will be asked to report the number of hours the slept in the 12 hours before they started work. The minimum will be zero hours and the maximum will be 12 hours. | Twice per week during the first 4 weeks of a residents ICU rotation | |
Other | Number of Resident Symptoms in last 24 hours. | Residents will describe the presence of each of 14 physical symptoms they experienced in the 24 hours prior to measurement. The measurement tool used is a study specific case report form (CRF). The minimum is 0 symptoms, the maximum is 14 symptoms. A greater number of reported symptoms is worse. A smaller number of reported symptoms is better. | Twice per week during the first 4 weeks of a residents ICU rotation | |
Primary | Rate of Patient Mortality After Index ICU Admission (First ICU Admission within the study periods) | Rate of Hospital mortality to 90 days following index ICU admission. Patients discharged from hospital before 90 days will be assumed to be alive at 90 days. | Up to 90 days following index ICU admission | |
Primary | Resident Cognitive Reasoning-Script Concordance Test | A Script Concordance Test will be administered in week 4 of the ICU resident rotation. Scoring was derived by administering the Script Concordance Test to an expert panel. The higher the overall rating for a resident, the closer their responses align with the expert panel. The minimum score is 0 and the maximum is 35. | During 4th week of ICU rotation | |
Primary | Resident Burnout - Emotional Exhaustion | The Emotional Exhaustion sub-scale of the Maslach Burnout Inventory will be measured in week four of the residents ICU rotation. Lower scores mean less emotional exhaustion, higher scores mean more emotional exhaustion. The lowest score is 0 and the highest score is 54. | 4th week of ICU rotation | |
Secondary | Rate of ICU Mortality | Patient death occurring during ICU admission. | Measured daily from ICU admission to ICU discharge. Estimated average is 7 days. | |
Secondary | Rate of Patient Adverse Events | Unplanned injury arising as a consequence of medical care during the time the patient was in the ICU that is associated with morbidity, requires treatment, prolongs hospital stay, or results in disability at discharge. | During ICU stay and up to 3 days post ICU discharge | |
Secondary | Rate of Medication Error | Reported or documented: dosing errors, wrong medication, or drug given to wrong patient. | During ICU stay and up to 3 days post ICU discharge | |
Secondary | Resident Procedural Competencies: Basic Airway Management | End-rotation simulation. Procedural skills will be assessed using the Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skills Global Rating Scale. The scale measures 7 domains, including the participant's knowledge of instruments, respect for tissue, and knowledge of the procedure.
Sub-scale ratings are averaged to create a global score: 1 is the minimum score and indicates the lowest performance; 5 is the maximum score and indicates the highest performance. |
During 4th week of ICU rotation | |
Secondary | Resident Procedural Competencies: Central Venous Line | End-rotation simulation. Procedural skills will be assessed using the Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skills Global Rating Scale. The scale measures 7 domains, including the participant's knowledge of instruments, respect for tissue, and knowledge of the procedure.
Sub-scale ratings from 1 to 5 are averaged to create a global score: 1 is the minimum score and indicates the lowest performance; 5 is the maximum score and indicates the highest performance. |
Week 4 of ICU rotation | |
Secondary | Resident Communication Competency | End-rotation simulation. Assessment of communication skills during a goals of care discussion with a simulated family member using a communication Analytic Global Rating Scale (AGRS). The scale will be used to assess 5 domains of the participant's communication: empathy, verbal expression, degree of coherence in the interview, non-verbal expression and an overall assessment of knowledge and skills.
The sub-scale ratings are averaged to create a global score: 1 is the minimum score and indicates the lowest performance; 5 is the maximum score and indicates the highest performance. |
Week 4 of ICU rotation | |
Secondary | Resident Depersonalization | The Maslach Burnout Inventory Depersonalization sub-scale will be used at week 4 of the resident ICU rotation. The range of scores is from 0 to 30. Higher scores indicate greater degrees of depersonalization. Lower scores indicate less depersonalization. | Week 4 of ICU rotation | |
Secondary | Resident Personal Accomplishment | The Maslach Burnout Inventory Personal Accomplishment sub-scale will be used at week 4 of the resident ICU rotation. The range of scores is from 0 to 48. Lower scores indicate less personal accomplishment. Higher scores indicate more personal accomplishment. | Week 4 of ICU rotation | |
Secondary | Resident Health Rating | Residents will rate their health on the day of survey. A score of 0 (the lowest value) represents the worst health and a score of 100 (the highest value) represents the best health the respondent can imagine. | Twice per week during the first 4 weeks of a residents ICU rotation | |
Secondary | Resident Nighttime Sleepiness | Assessment of resident nighttime sleepiness using the Stanford Sleepiness Scale. The scale allows participants to indicate their level of sleepiness from on a 7-point scale from 1 to 7. A rating of 1 represents the least sleepy (most awake) and a rating of 7 the most sleepy. An additional (8th) response " I was asleep at the time of the assessment" is used if the resident was asleep at the time of the assessment. | Two days per week at 8pm, midnight and 4am during the first 4 weeks of a residents ICU rotation | |
Secondary | Resident Daytime Sleepiness | Assessment of resident daytime sleepiness using the Stanford Sleepiness Scale. The scale allows participants to indicate their level of sleepiness from on a 7-point scale from 1 to 7. A rating of 1 represents the least sleepy (most awake) and a rating of 7 the most sleepy. An additional (8th) response " I was asleep at the time of the assessment" is used if the resident was asleep at the time of the assessment. | Two days per week at 8am, noon and 4pm during the first 4 weeks of a residents ICU rotation |
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