Clinical Trials Directory

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CompletedNCT03414671

The Effect of Standardizing the Definition of a Clinically Significant Cardiopulmonary Event on Length of Stay

The Effect of Standardizing the Definition and Approach to a Clinically Significant Cardiopulmonary Event in Infants Less Than 30 Weeks on Length of Stay

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
160 (actual)
Sponsor
Pediatrix · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
23 Weeks – 29 Weeks
Healthy volunteers

Summary

A health care initiative will be implemented December 4, 2017 in the Newborn Intensive Care (NICU) setting in an attempt to reduce the length of stay (LOS) for premature infants after standardizing the definition and approach to a clinically significant cardiopulmonary event (CSCPE). We would like to compare LOS in infants born \< 30 weeks gestation before and after standardization to see if LOS is reduced.

Detailed description

The LOS of infants born \< 30 weeks prior to implementation of the standardized definition of a CSCPE (11/30/2015-11/30/2017) will be compared to the LOS for all infants who meet the inclusion criteria and born \< 30 weeks from 6/1/2018 - 12/31/20. Data collection will begin June 1,2018, seven months after implementing the CSCPE definition. This will allow time for the nursing staff, the physicians and nurse practitioners to become familiar with the new CSCPE definition and management. Following implementation of the new definition, the researchers will also do a 6 month audit on nursing response to a CSCPE based on the current alarm settings. Initially we do not plan to change the alarm limits but we may find the lower alarm limits for heart rate and oxygen saturation are set too high and may need to be lowered to more accurately assist nurses in recognizing when an infant is having a CSCPE. If the 6 month audit shows nurses are "missing" a CSCPE because the current lower alarm limits are set too high, or stimulating an infant inappropriately too early, the alarm limits will be changed at every bedside. If the alarm limits are reset, data collection will begin 6 months after the alarms are changed. This is expected to be starting 1/1/2019 and conclude 12/31/20. If it is decided the lower alarm limits will not need to be changed, data collection will begin 6/1/2018 and conclude 8/31/20 instead of 12/31/20.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2018-06-01
Primary completion
2021-08-31
Completion
2021-09-21
First posted
2018-01-30
Last updated
2021-10-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03414671. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

The Effect of Standardizing the Definition of a Clinically Significant Cardiopulmonary Event on Length of Stay (NCT03414671) · Clinical Trials Directory