Early Recognition and Rapid Administration of Acute Condition in
Intensive Care Unit: A Literature Review
Muhamad Ibnu Hasan
1
, Untung Sujianto
2
and Reni Sulung Utami
2
1
Students of Master Program in Nursing, Faculty of Medicine, Diponegoro University, Indonesia
2
Lecturer of Department of Nursing, Faculty of Medicine, Diponegoro University, Indonesia
Keywords: Early Recognition, Vital Sign Monitor, Rapid Administration, Direct Therapy, Intensive Care Unit.
Abstract: The observation program is an attempt to determine the deterioration of the patient's condition and has an
important role in improving patient safety. Critical care advantage patients whose near death through a
series of detailed observation actions with or without invasive and restorative treatment. Early recognition
and rapid administration is a prediction method for the successful treatment of acutely ill patients with a
high risk of death and decrease sepsis mortality. The aim of this review is to explore concept early
recognition and rapid administration method as the monitoring intervention in intensive care unit. This
article used integratif literature review through the search for published and gray literature in the following
databases: EBSCO (CINAHL & MEDLINE), Science Direct and PubMed. This review found 32
documents and selected 9 articles and 3 books literature for data extraction and analysis. Early recognition
and rapid administration method can be applied in intensive care unit. Vital Sign Direct Therapy (VSDT) is
considered to be suitable paper based protocol for early recognition and rapid administration method and
used goal directed therapy approach for the patient in intensive care unit. VSDT protocol consist of
monitoring and early intervention in danger sign in acute condition.
1 INTRODUCTION
Monitoring is basic intervention that is carried out
routinely and continuously in intensive care.
Monitoring is an effort to practice the forefront in an
effort to optimize hemodynamics, ventilation,
temperature, nutrition and metabolism in improving
the survival of patients in critical care rooms.
Monitoring also plays an important role in assessing
the effects of treatment, detecting procedural
complications and identifying early signs of clinical
damage (M. R & Payen, 2005; Moreno, Rhodes, &
Donchin, 2009).
Patients monitoring is carried out in detail with
or without accompanying invasive care efforts that
support the achievement of restorative care goals.
The purpose of restorative care is an attempt to
restore the physiological functions of critically ill
patients and if not achieved, patients can experience
a condition of organ failure which is the main cause
of patient death in critical care rooms (Aslakson et
al., 2012).
The knowledge insuficiency of monitoring
practice and delayed in treatment is a prone to errors
in carring process that can inhibit the benefits of
restorative care in critical care. The goals of
restorative care also constrained with the orientation
of health care provider which is more attention in
carring form oriented than patients oriented, lack of
access to support and standard decision according to
the patient's condition and lack of efficient global
facilities. The survey on critical care practices
indicate that the majority of ICU rooms have
limitations in acute resuscitation regulation
resources, especially in an effort to assess conditions
early and make decisions about giving immediate
treatment to patients (Bracco et al., 2001; Pronovost
et al., 2003).
The standard method to evaluate patient
condition early and decission of treatment rapidly
for critically ill patients are needed to overcome this
obstacle in critical care unit. Health care providers
must able perform clinical assessment to determine
patient's condition through monitoring, identified
patient clinical hazard conditions immediately and
give appropriate intervention for patients. (Benner P,
Tanner, & Chesla, 2009).
Acute patient had unstable condition and need
Hasan, M., Sujianto, U. and Utami, R.
Early Recognition and Rapid Administration of Acute Condition in Intensive Care Unit: A Literature Review.
DOI: 10.5220/0008201700670071
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference of Indonesian National Nurses Association (ICINNA 2018), pages 67-71
ISBN: 978-989-758-406-0
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
67
continuous monitoring and treatment until get stable.
Patients with danger clinical conditions need to get
rapid action, include the efforts to consult with
another medical staff for the administration and
provide rescuciation management. Delayed efforts to
detect patient deterioration and the administration
will affect the final patient outcome. Therefore, the
effort need to improve monitoring as the clinical
assessment and immediately management of patients
with critical illness conditions in intensive care
(Kipnis et al., 2012).
2 AIMS
This paper is a literature review that explore concept
early recognition and rapid administration method as
the monitoring intervention in intensive care unit.
3 METHOD
Literatur review was chosen because it contain broad
integration of empirical and theoretical literature to
explore concept of certain phenomenon. An
extensive literature search was used in English,
conducted from 2010 to 2017 and following
databases Ebsco (CINAHL & MEDLINE), PubMed,
Spinger and text book literature. The included
studies used all range of study designs with
following keywords early recognition, rapid
administration, critical care, intensive care unit. The
combined database search was found 32 documents
and selected 9 final articles and 3 books literature for
data extraction and analysis. Most of the studies
excluded were not in adult patient and not full text.
4 RESULT
4.1 Early Recognition in Intensive Care
Early detection is an attempt to find a disorder or
disease before developing into deteriorating
conditions. Efforts to early detection in intensive
nursing focus on the inability to identify earlier
deterioration in the condition of patients who might
benefit from the implementation of a series of
actions and strategies that continue to evolve to
improve treatment outcomes (Schultz, 2009).
Early detection of patient deterioration condition
is carried out immediately and requires accuracy in
assessing deterioration that occurs through patient
hemodynamic monitoring. Monitoring
hemodynamic conditions aims to provide factual
data in increasing the oxygenation needs of the body
tissues that are the furthest and effective in dealing
with hypoxia, shock and multiorgan failure. The
condition of vital organ hypoperfusion that lasts a
long time can cause multiple organ system
dysfunction, organ failure and end with death
(Rubenfeld, Aslin, & Rubinson, 2007; Pinsky &
Payen, 2005).
Hemodynamic changes in acute care settings
reflect the presence of cardiovascular insufficiency
conditions and response to an intervention. Early
monitoring of patients with unstable conditions is
carried out by assessing changes in vital signs and
specific organ perfusion markers such as capillary
filling speed (CRT) and urine output (Schultz,
2009).
The initial compensation that occurs in acute
care conditions is characterized by a mechanism for
increased breathing and heart rate with or without a
significant decrease in blood pressure and changes in
oxygen saturation as a sign of the initial decline in
the patient's condition. The effort of early detection
and management of the decline in the condition of
patients in acute conditions is carried out by
conducting an assessment of the Airway approach,
Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Exposure
(ABCDE) (Thim et al., 2015).
The ABCDE assesment is an approach for all
emergencies clinical condition to conduct immediate
assessment and management. This approach
improves treatment outcomes by focusing on life-
threatening clinical problems.
4.2 Early Administration in Intensive
Care
Early management is the provision of early
intervention carried out in medical emergencies
conducted by various regulatory techniques such as
the use of bundle methods and aggressive
resuscitation efforts based on goals direct therapy.
Goal-directed therapy (GDT) is a monitoring
technique to help guide fluid therapy, vasopressors,
inotropic and other treatments for patients in various
clinical settings. Goal-directed therapy uses
adjustments to heart activity which include preload,
afterload and contractility in an effort to balance
oxygen distribution with the body's oxygen needs
(Glew, 2009; Thompson-hill et al., 2009; O’Neal &
Shaw, 2015; Rivers et al., 2001).
The application of GDT significantly reduces the
duration of hospital stay and complications that arise
ICINNA 2018 - The 1st International Conference of Indonesian National Nurses Association
68
after treatment as a whole, especially kidney injury,
respiratory failure and wound infection. GDT was
originally developed in a critical care area to provide
care for surgical patients at high risk of shock, but
GDT has now been developed in the areas of
general, orthopedic, cardiothoracic and vascular
surgical treatments (Cecconi et al., 2013; Dunn,
Grocott, & Mythen, 2016).
4.3 Institutional Systems Improve
Earlier Recognition Rapid
Administration in Acute Resusitasi
Early recognition and rapid administration is an
effort to improve treatment success in patients with
acute conditions with a high risk of death. This
procedure is a key to the initial intervention that has
been carried out by referring to the target period of
the gold period as an achievement against safety
from life-threatening conditions. Efforts to
accelerate detection and treatment of patients have
been shown to increase outcomes for various acute
life-threatening emergency conditions, such as in
cases of acute myocardial infarction (MI), stroke,
shock or sepsis (Funk, Sebat and Kumar, 2009).
The strategy of aggressive early detection and
resuscitation is carried out to achieve a balance
between systemic oxygen delivery and demand for
oxygen to be a more definite profitable strategy.
This approach is also used in critical care areas as an
effort to increase the aggressiveness of care,
intervention and resuscitation by monitoring changes
in hemodynamic values. Indicators of hemodynamic
values and physiology will interact to obtain
performance and physiological estimates that can be
used as an effort to encourage early management
(Moser, 2014; Xu et al., 2016).
The application of early recognition and rapid
administration method in acute resuscitation critical
patient has been carried out with development
research program and produced several instruments
that can be used, the are checklist for early
recognition and treatment of acute Illness
(CERTAIN) dan vital sign direct therapy (VSDT).
CERTAIN is a web-based decision support tool
that displays relevant clinical information and is
filled with evidence-based knowledge of the best
clinical practice, organized according to a systematic
review of end-user data requirements and ergonomic
workflows. The CERTAIN application on mobile
devices was also developed with HTML-5 as a
complementary part of availability and ease of use
CERTAIN (Vukoja, 2015).
CERTAIN consists of two modules namely the
ELITE module (stabilizing the patient's condition
that threatens an emergency during admission /
resuscitation) and the CERTAIN round module (to
help provide routine maintenance every day
recommended). The CERTAIN module is regulated
by considering how experts incorporate information
into decision making models of clinical conditions.
Assessment of this application begins with an effort
to read each element from top to bottom which
contains primary assessment (ABCDE) and
secondary surveys and readings from left to right
which contain the basic elements of determining
clinical conditions for a list of patient problems,
availability of interventions on the central panel
status and proposed treatment and intervention
(Vukoja, 2015).
VSDT is one of the regulation strategies for
directed therapy through a series of efforts to
monitor changes in the condition of the patient's
vital signs which include airway, breathing and
circulating accompanied by procedures for
emergency conditions or hazard conditions that
occur based on paper records. VSDT is modified
from an EWS (early warning system) instrument by
considering the limited time and availability of
health resources (Baker, 2009).
The VSDT protocol is based on the limited time
and availability of appropriate health resources
provided by health workers, some of the activities
that can be carried out by nurses without a doctor's
direct presence, can be modified by the treating
physician, not as a substitute for doctors and clinical
assessment and openness is advanced therapy. The
parameters of a single danger sign are sorted from
several composite scores to create simplicity and
efforts to activate the early and specific governance
directions to be given. If a danger sign is found from
one of the parameters, the exclusion protocol
observations of vital signs are carried out more
frequently, ie every 30 minutes and given acute
acute resuscitation management for patients (Schell
et al., 2015).
5 DISCUSSION
Critical care provides restorative care to patients
with critically ill conditions through a series of
observation and management measures that are not
obtained in the usual care room. The success of
restorative efforts is able to restore the function of
organs as they should, but failure can lead to the
emergence of death.
Early Recognition and Rapid Administration of Acute Condition in Intensive Care Unit: A Literature Review
69
The main cause of death in intensive care is the
presence of acute and refractory multiple organ
dysfunction syndrome, central nervous system
failure and heart failure. Acute and refractory
multiple organ dysfunction (MODS) syndrome is a
developmental condition that has the potential to
disturb the physiological body but is reversible,
involving two or more organ systems due to
worsening physiological conditions (Ramírez,
2013).
MODS management is carried out with several
non-specific treatments in an effort to resolution and
prevent worsening conditions. Important events that
often appear before the occurrence of MODS is the
emergence of hypocirculation or shock conditions
that can often be predicted to occur within the first
24 hours of receipt. This condition is an important
concern, because early detection and the provision
of adequate initial resuscitation measures are the
main therapeutic focus that can improve the patient's
prognosis (Mizock, 2009; Khwannimit, 2008).
Implementation of patient management through
early recognition and rapid administration approach
in intensive care unit according to the principles of
MODS management which is the main cause of
death in critical patients. MODS occurs clearly
within 24-48 hours after a threat of physiological
conditions. The classic sequence of organ
dysfunction usually begins with the discovery of
signs of respiratory dysfunction and followed by
liver or gastrointestinal system dysfunction, kidneys
and other organs (Mohan, Harikrishna and Kumar,
2014).
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is
an early manifestation of the emergence of
respiratory system involvement in the condition of
MODS. The involvement of the digestive system is
characterized by an increase in transaminase liver
enzymes, hyperbilirubinemia and synthetic
dysfunction with an increase in international
normalized ration (INR) that develops into severe
liver failure or mild hyperbilirubinemia with or
without cholestasis. Acute kidney injury is classified
according to the RIFLE category.
Cardiovascular dysfunction is characterized by a
vascular condition that experiences systemic and
hypermetabolic inflammation. A decrease in the
Glasgow coma scale indicates neurological
dysfunction. Endocrine dysfunction is characterized
by dysfunction of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis,
impaired glucose and protein metabolism
(Venkataraman and Kellum, 2007).
6 CONCLUSION
Early recognition and rapid administration can be
applied in the intensive care unit. Vital Sign Direct
Therapy (VSDT) is considered as paper-based
protocol that is suitable for early recognition and fast
administration methods using goal-directed therapy
approach for patients in the intensive care unit. The
VSDT protocol consists of monitoring and optional
initial intervention in danger signs in acute
conditions.
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