Abstract

Background: Delirium is a high prevalent postoperative complication in older cardiac surgery patients and can have drastic consequence for the patient. Preventive interventions, diagnosis and treatment of delirium require specialized knowledge and skills. Objective: To gain insight in the current opinion and beliefs of nurses in hospitals concerning prevention, diagnosis and treatment of delirium in older hospital patients in general and specifically in older cardiac surgery patients. Methods: In a cross-sectional study from February to July 2010, we distributed a survey on beliefs on delirium care among 368 nurses in three hospitals in the Netherlands, in one hospital in all wards with older patients and in two hospitals in the cardiac surgery wards only. Results: Although in literature incidence rates up to 54.9% in cardiac surgery patients in hospitals are reported, with a response rate of 68% (250), half of the nurses believe that the incidence of delirium is not even 10%. Two thirds think that delirium in patients is preventable. Although, the Delirium Observation Scale is most often used for screening delirium, nearly all nurses do not routinely screen patients for delirium. Opinions on delirium of nurses working in cardiac surgery wards did not differ from nurses caring for older patients in other hospital wards. Conclusions: Nurses do have knowledge on delirium care, but there is a gap between the reported incidence in literature and the estimation of the occurrence of delirium by nurses. A two-way causal relationship emerges: because nurses underestimate the occurrence, they do not screen patients on a routine basis. And because they do not screen patients on a routine basis they underestimate the incidence.

Highlights

  • In the past decades, mortality during or shortly after cardiac surgery has decreased [1]

  • Delirium is associated with functional decline at one month in cardiac surgery patients [11], with postoperative cognitive dysfunction at one week post-surgery in coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) patients [17] and with sleep disturbances in cardiac surgery patients [10]

  • The questionnaire was face validity tested by a psychiatric nurse and a psychiatrist, both involved in delirium care in the Röpcke Zweers hospital in the Netherlands

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Summary

Introduction

Mortality during or shortly after cardiac surgery has decreased [1]. Morbidity has increased [2], mainly because cardiac surgery is increasingly utilized in older and more vulnerable patients. This often results in more complications after surgery and potential reduction in quality of life [3]-[5]. Objective: To gain insight in the current opinion and beliefs of nurses in hospitals concerning prevention, diagnosis and treatment of delirium in older hospital patients in general and in older cardiac surgery patients. Opinions on delirium of nurses working in cardiac surgery wards did not differ from nurses caring for older patients in other hospital wards.

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