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Clinical Trial Summary

Patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) undergo complex critical care treatment and are consequently surrounded by equipment and monitors contributing to high sound pressure levels. In addition, many medical and nursing ICU staff members work together with numerous visiting consultants resulting in an additional sound burden. As is already known, in the ICU environment, many activities carried out by healthcare professionals, require a high level of concentration. So, the noisy ICU environment causes interruptions in activities that require concentration and induce in this way, a higher potential for errors. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) set standards for sound levels in hospitals with a recommendation for patient treatment areas. There is a clear trend for increasing hospital noise since the sixties. According to healthcare professionals, one of the strongest contributing factors of noise in the ICU environment are monitoring alarms as they occur very frequently. Additionally, ICU nurses experience high levels of stress towards clinical alarms and are becoming alarm fatigue, which means that the staff becomes desensitized because of an excessive number of alarms and may disable or silence alarms without checking the patient . Consensus dictates the importance of reducing sound pressure levels and the numerous alarm signals from monitor alarms in the ICU. In the study, we focus on busy predetermined areas in the ICU. This study aims to determine the effect of an intervention bundle, aimed at the reduction of "noise" (decibels) and its effect on health care professionals.


Clinical Trial Description

Design: The introduction is done by a stepped wedge cluster randomized design. The study will be carried out in five units of the department of intensive care medicine of the Radboud University Medical Center, a 950-bed university hospital in the Netherlands. The study focus on health care providers in the ICU.The research consists of the introduction of an intervention bundle to reduce noise and therefore interruptions during their daily work activities. Inclusion: All health care providers present at the ICU, during the study period (about 350) are asked to participate. They will recieve information about the aim, content and relevance of the study and will be asked for participation.They are free to refuse to participate in the study (e.g. part of observations, survey). Methods: The data collection focuses on quantitative noise measurements at the predetermined locations in ICU units during the study period. In addition, during the entire study period (control and intervention), we analyse the amount and type of alarms. Thirdly, we collect data with regard to disruptions during the daily work process of healthcare professionals (e.g. during "high-risk moments", such as: medication preparation) by observations. Finally, health care providers are asked about their perceived annoyance, as a result of ambient noise (NRS-annoyance). Data analysis will be supported with the use of Excel, Phyton and SPSS. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04643652
Study type Interventional
Source Radboud University Medical Center
Contact Jeanette Vreman, MSc
Phone 0641247550
Email Jeanette.Vreman@Radboudumc.nl
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date August 1, 2022
Completion date December 1, 2023

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