Acute neurorehabilitation: does a neurosensory and coordinated interdisciplinary programme reduce tracheostomy weaning time and weaning failure?

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_7F73F2560C9A
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Acute neurorehabilitation: does a neurosensory and coordinated interdisciplinary programme reduce tracheostomy weaning time and weaning failure?
Journal
Neurorehabilitation
Author(s)
Berney L., Wasserfallen J.B., Grant K., Levivier M., Simon C., Faouzi M., Paillex R., Schweizer V., Diserens K.
ISSN
1878-6448 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1053-8135
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2014
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
34
Number
4
Pages
809-817
Language
english
Abstract
BACKGROUND/PURPOSE: A new coordinated interdisciplinary unit was created in the acute section of the department of clinical neurosciences, the Acute NeuroRehabilitation (NRA) unit. The objective was to evaluate the impact of the unit and its neurosensory programme on the management of tracheostomy patients in terms of reduction in the average time taken for weaning, weaning success rate and therapeutic efficiency.
METHODS: This 49-month retrospective study compares 2 groups of tracheostomy patients before (n = 34) and after (n = 46) NRA intervention. The outcome measures evaluate the benefits of the NRA unit intervention (time to decannulation, weaning and complication rates) and the benefits of the coordination (time to registration in a rehabilitation centre and rate of non-compliance with standards of care).
RESULTS: Weaning failure rate was reduced from 27.3% to 9.1%, no complications or recannulations were observed in the post-intervention group after weaning and time to decannulation following admission to our unit decreased from 19.13 to 12.75 days. The rate of non-compliance with patient standards of care was significantly reduced from 45% to 30% (Mann-Whitney p = 0.003).
DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS: This interdisciplinary weaning programme helped to reduce weaning time and weaning failure, without increased complications, in the sample studied. Coordination improved the efficiency of the interdisciplinary team in the multiplicity and complexity of the different treatments.
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
05/08/2014 19:04
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:40
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