A hospitals manual method of patient monitoring will be implemented in an automated system and supported by an early patient deterioration detection for timely escalation. The purpose of this study is to assess if clinical outcomes of patients in Acute Care are significantly improved by such a system.
The purpose of this study is to assess if the Philips IntelliVue Guardian Solution (IGS) with all its components can significantly improve clinical outcomes for deteriorating patients on a general medical ward prior and after referral to the hospitals' Acute Care Team (ACT). Further, to provide evidence that the Philips IGS assists to increase the efficiency of a hospital's Early Warning Scoring process (afferent and efferent arm of the escalation system). The introduction of such an intelligent automated system offers a unique opportunity to address the breakdown in the chain of prevention by strengthening the reliability of calls-for-help to responders through a technical solution with the potential for a more timely escalation where appropriate. In this study the hospital's Standard of Care protocol for the monitoring of vital signs (including timing, vital signs collected and escalation instructions) will be implemented in a commercially available intelligent automatic monitoring and notification system. No investigational procedures or devices are associated with this protocol.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
678
Ysbyty Gwynedd Hospital
Bangor, Penrhosgarnedd, United Kingdom
Improvement of outcome for patients after implementing the IGS
Does the IGS significantly increase positive outcomes for deteriorating patients after referral to the RRT/ACT as measured by the MAELOR score
Time frame: 15 months
Early detection of patient deterioration
Does the IGS detect patient deterioration earlier and therefore prevent or shorten periods of severe illness.
Time frame: 15 months
Daily workload for the ward's personnel
Does the IGS reduce the daily workload related to patient surveillance for the general ward personnel.
Time frame: 15 months
Level of satisfaction
Do Nurses and Doctors express a higher level of satisfaction with the IGS in place than with their current paper-based surveillance.
Time frame: 15 months
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