Helping to clarify mechanical ventilation protocols.
نویسنده
چکیده
When to discontinue mechanical ventilation is a large part of the work we do in the ICU every day. For patients, a large part of the time spent on mechanical ventilation is in the weaning process. Typically, the decision to start weaning is primarily physician-dependent, and, much to the chagrin of many physicians, studies have revealed that a well designed protocol is better for our patients and hospital systems. Early discontinuation of mechanical ventilation decreases morbidity and costs. Many reviews have been done, including Girard and Ely’s, in 2008, which revealed many benefits, including decreases in ventilator and weaning time, ICU costs, complications, ICU and hospital stay, ventilator-associated pneumonia, and improved survival.3 In a busy ICU, protocols can help free up time to work on more critical patients. Patients who are in the weaning process typically suffer in a busy ICU because they are deemed stable. A protocol keeps this process going and requires minimal physician input until the patient is ready for discontinuation from the ventilator. A protocol also standardizes care by reducing practice variability; I am sure we have all worked in an ICU where each physician has his or her own way of managing care. Most protocols begin by assessing whether the patient’s etiology of respiratory failure has improved and the patient is stable for weaning. If so, the patient undergoes a spontaneous breathing trial. A spontaneous breathing trial was identified as the superior method of weaning by Esteban and colleagues, in 1995.4 The spontaneous breathing trial is typically coupled with a daily wake-up from sedation, and this combination has been shown to improve outcomes in the ICU.5 This is usually followed by a pressure support or CPAP trial with minimal pressure support or PEEP. The patient is then extubated if he or she meets the criteria set forth by the protocol, and only with a physician order. In this issue of RESPIRATORY CARE, Gupta et al reinforce the fact that protocols are our best option in weaning mechanical ventilation in most patients.6 This was a large study, evaluating the outcomes of a respiratory-therapistdriven protocol versus physician-driven orders in patients with simple and difficult mechanical ventilation weaning. The study revealed an improvement in ventilator-free days, by 20% in the simple-weaning patients, and 68% in the difficult-weaning patients, and both those differences were statistically significant. The smaller improvement in the patients with simple weaning was likely expected, as most of these patients do not spend much time on the ventilator. Though the decrease in time spent on mechanical ventilation was statistically significant in the difficult-weaning group, patients in this category are felt to represent only about 16% of patients on mechanical ventilation.7 This was the exact number seen in the Gupta et al study as well. The control group subjects received usual care, provided by physicians who opted out of the study. This is the exact reason protocols have been implemented in many hospitals, as usual care is not always the standard of care, and not much is said of the care the control group received. This is the first study to address a weaning protocol in patients broken up into simple versus difficult weaning groups. It was first recommended to stratify these patients into 3 groups by a task force of the Sixth International Consensus Conference on Intensive Care Medicine.7 This may help to decide which patients may benefit from weaning protocols. As with many topics in the healthcare system, there are controversies concerning weaning protocols and all protocols. The studies that have shown no benefit are mostly in specific patient groups, such as neurosurgical, trauma, or pediatric ICU patients, though there have also been studies in these groups that have been successful. The study in this issue of RESPIRATORY CARE included a mixed patient population and corresponds to most of the literature on weaning protocols. One study in a mixed ICU that did not find a significant difference with a weaning protocol benefitted from very high physician staffing to patient ratio. The level of staffing was 9.5 physician-hours per bed per day.8 If only we all worked in hospitals that could afford that amount of staffing. Protocols have been criticized that they replace clinical judgment and are “cookie cutter” medicine. In the study by Gupta et al,6 and in most other such studies, the order to extubate is still done by a physician, and this is something that needs to be done at the bedside. This is where clinical
منابع مشابه
Development and implementation of explicit computerized protocols for mechanical ventilation in children
Mechanical ventilation can be perceived as a treatment with a very narrow therapeutic window, i.e., highly efficient but with considerable side effects if not used properly and in a timely manner. Protocols and guidelines have been designed to make mechanical ventilation safer and protective for the lung. However, variable effects and low compliance with use of written protocols have been repor...
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Ventilator weaning protocols have the potential to expedite the weaning process and have been shown to reduce weaning time and the duration of mechanical ventilation in several studies. However, other studies have found no benefits from weaning protocols, and they may be particularly superfluous in highly staffed and structured intensive care units. Furthermore, for a protocol to improve outcom...
متن کاملClinical protocols and trainee knowledge about mechanical ventilation.
CONTEXT Clinical protocols are associated with improved patient outcomes; however, they may negatively affect medical education by removing trainees from clinical decision making. OBJECTIVE To study the relationship between critical care training with mechanical ventilation protocols and subsequent knowledge about ventilator management. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A retrospective coho...
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CITATION Prasad M, Holmboe ES, Lipner RS, Hess BJ, Christie JD, Bellamy SL, Rubenfeld GD, Kahn JM. Clinical Protocols and Trainee Knowledge About Mechanical Ventilation. JAMA. 2011; 306(9):935-941. PubMed PMID: 21900133 This is available on http://www.pubmed.gov BACKGROUND Clinical protocols are associated with improved patient outcomes; however, they may negatively affect medical education b...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Respiratory care
دوره 59 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2014