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Volume 6, Issue 4 (Suppl)

J Nurs Care, an open access journal

ISSN: 2167-1168

Euro Nursing 2017

October 26-28, 2017

32

nd

EURO

NURSING AND MEDICARE SUMMIT

October 26-28, 2017 | Paris, France

How do knowledge and understanding of sleep deprivation influence clinical decision making of

intensive care nurses when managing sleep in critically ill patients?

Alison Hasselder

Anglia Ruskin University, UK

S

leep deprivation holds many consequences for critically ill patients including slower recovery, decreased resistance to

infection and neurological problems such as delirium (Dick-Smith 2017, Tembo and Parker 2009). Nesbitt and Goode

(2014) argued that nurses sometimes lack complex understanding of the importance of sleep and the interventions required

to promote it. A shift in nursing and institutional culture is required to apply sleep promotion strategies and research, and

to minimise unpleasant outcomes for patients (Dick-Smith 2017). This paper will present the quantitative results of this two

phased Constructivist Grounded Theory study focusing on what has been learnt about nurses’ decision making and how this

can influence the quality of sleep their patients achieve in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). Data was collected from 19 nurses

through an online survey. All grades of nursing staff (Bands 5-7) described using research to guide their decision making

and this appears to have been particularly important for Band 5 respondents, who also reported following unwritten rules

when looking for strategies to help them make decisions about their patient’s sleep problems. This was found to be highly

significant. 15 respondents (78.9%) knew there was a sleep protocol and all respondents felt supported in making decisions

about promoting sleep for their patients. The qualities that the nurses in the sample would look for in a fellow nurse to help

them make decisions included someone that was knowledgeable, was trustworthy, had credibility and provided holistic care.

Limitations of the study included the small sample. Recommendations are made for how improved sleep for patients in ICU is

possible by focusing on, and exploring, nurses’ decision making. Unanswered questions will now be followed up with phase 2

of the study and the qualitative semi structured interviews.

References

Dickens-Smith, F,. 2017 Sorry, were you sleeping? Nurses’ role in the promotion of sleep for critically ill patients. Contemporary

Nurse 53 (1) pp 121-125

Nesbitt,L., & Goode, D.,2014. Nurses perception of sleep in the Intensive care environment: Literature review Intensive care

Nursing 30 (4) 231-235

Tembo, A.C., Parker, V. & Higgins, I. 2013, "The experience of sleep deprivation in intensive care patients: Findings from a

larger hermeneutic phenomenological study", Intensive & Critical Care Nursing, vol. 29, no. 6, pp. 310-316 7p

Biography

Alison Hasselder is a Nurse Lecturer at University of East Anglia and is currently studying her PhD at Anglia Ruskin University in Critical Care Nursing.

Leslie Gelling is a Reader in Research Ethics and Nursing in the Faculty of Health, Social Care and Education at Anglia Ruskin University Cambridge.

Stewart Piper is Director of Studies in the Faculty of Health Social Care and Education at Anglia Ruskin University Cambridge.

Alison.hasselder@student.anglia.ac.uk

Alison Hasselder, J Nurs Care 2017, 6:4(Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2167-1168-C1-061