Impact of a Sleep Enhancement Protocol on Nighttime Room Entries in an Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility.

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q3 NURSING Rehabilitation Nursing Pub Date : 2021-07-01 DOI:10.1097/RNJ.0000000000000291
Molly J Sullan, Bhumi B Patel, Russell M Bauer, Michael S Jaffee
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Abstract

Purpose: This study examined whether a sleep enhancement protocol (SEP) could reduce nighttime room entries (NREs) for patients with orthopedic injury (OI) or acquired brain injury (ABI) in an inpatient rehabilitation facility.

Design: A two-wave prospective study assessing standard of care (SOC) versus SEP.

Methods: Sixty-five participants completed baseline and follow-up questionnaires and wore an actigraph for approximately 7 days. In the SEP, nighttime care was "bundled."

Findings: In SOC, NREs were associated with less efficient sleep and greater daytime fatigue. Nighttime room entries were approximately 50% lower in the SEP than SOC. Participants in the OI SOC had more room entries than any other group. There were no significant changes in room entries in the ABI SEP group.

Conclusions: There was a relationship between NREs and sleep. The SEP was effective at reducing NREs for patients with OI, but not ABI.

Clinical relevance: Sleep enhancement protocols in inpatient rehabilitation facilities may be effective at improving sleep. Future research may focus on developing individualized protocols to improve sleep across patients with a variety of presenting diagnoses.

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睡眠增强方案对住院康复机构夜间房间进入的影响。
目的:本研究探讨了睡眠增强方案(SEP)是否可以减少住院康复机构骨科损伤(OI)或获得性脑损伤(ABI)患者的夜间房间入住率(NREs)。设计:一项评估标准护理(SOC)与sep的两波前瞻性研究。方法:65名参与者完成基线和随访问卷调查,并佩戴活动记录仪约7天。在SEP中,夜间护理是“捆绑的”。研究发现:在SOC中,NREs与睡眠效率较低和白天疲劳程度较高有关。夜间进入房间的SEP比SOC低约50%。OI SOC的参与者比任何其他组有更多的房间条目。在ABI SEP组中,房间入住次数没有明显变化。结论:NREs与睡眠之间存在一定的关系。SEP对降低成骨不全患者的NREs有效,但对ABI无效。临床相关性:住院康复机构的睡眠增强方案可能对改善睡眠有效。未来的研究可能侧重于制定个性化的方案,以改善患有各种表现诊断的患者的睡眠。
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来源期刊
Rehabilitation Nursing
Rehabilitation Nursing 医学-护理
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
7.70%
发文量
68
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Rehabilitation Nursing is a refereed, award-winning publication and is the official journal of the Association of Rehabilitation Nurses. Its purpose is to provide rehabilitation professionals with high-quality articles with a primary focus on rehabilitation nursing. Topics range from administration and research to education and clinical topics, and nursing perspectives, with continuing education opportunities in every issue. Articles range from administration and research to education and clinical topics; nursing perspectives, resource reviews, and product information; and continuing education opportunities in every issue.
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