Structure and concept of ICU rounds: : the VIS-ITS survey

Affiliation
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
Hillmann, Bastian;
GND
1156202949
ORCID
0000-0002-1568-8202
Affiliation
Center for Sepsis Control and Care, University of Jena
Schwarzkopf, Daniel;
Affiliation
FHNW School of Applied Psychology, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland, Olten, Switzerland
Manser, Tanja;
Affiliation
Medical Faculty, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany
Waydhas, Christian;
Affiliation
Medical ICU, Department of Medicine, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
Riessen, Reimer

Objective To gather data about structural and procedural characteristics of patient rounds in the intensive care unit (ICU) setting. Design A structured online survey was offered to members of two German intensive care medicine societies. Measurements and main results Intensivists representing 390 German ICUs participated in this study (university hospitals 25%, tertiary hospitals 23%, secondary hospitals 36%, primary hospitals 16%). In 90% of participating ICUs, rounds were reported to take place in the morning and cover an average of 12 intensive care beds and 6 intermediate care beds within 60 min. With an estimated bed occupancy of 80%, this averaged to 4.3 min spent per patient during rounds. In 96% of ICUs, rounds were stated to include a bedside visit. On weekdays, 86% of the respondents reported holding a second ICU round with the attendance of a qualified decision-maker (e.g. board-certified intensivist). On weekends, 79% of the ICUs performed at least one round with a decision-maker per day. In 18%, only one ICU round per weekend was reported, mostly on Sundays. The highest-qualified decision-maker present during rounds on most ICUs was an ICU attending (57%). Residents (96%) and intensive care nurses (87%) were stated to be always or usually present during rounds. In contrast, physiotherapists, respiratory therapists or medical specialists such as pharmacists or microbiologist were not regular members of the rounding team on most ICUs. In the majority of cases, the participants reported examining the medical chart directly before or during the bedside visit (84%). An electronic patient data management system (PDMS) was available on 31% of ICUs. Daily goals were always (55%) or usually (39%) set during rounds. Conclusion This survey gives a broad overview of the structure and processes of ICU rounds in different sized hospitals in Germany. Compared to other mostly Anglo-American studies, German ICU rounds appear to be shorter and less interdisciplinary.

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