The goal of this clinical trial is to determine whether an eye-tracking interactive agent can ameliorate communication impairments and reduce the incidence of complications among non-verbal patients in the intensive care unit (ICU). The main questions it aims to answer are: Does the eye tracking interactive agent alleviate communication impairments among non-verbal patients in the ICU? Does the eye tracking interactive agent improve communication efficiency among non-verbal patients in the ICU? Does the eye tracking interactive agent m reduce the incidence of negative emotions among non-verbal patients in the ICU? Does the eye tracking interactive agent shorten the ICU length of stay for non-verbal patients in the ICU? Does the eye tracking interactive agent reduce the dosage of analgesic and sedative medications for non-verbal patients in the ICU? Does the eye tracking interactive agent improve family satisfaction for non-verbal patients in the ICU? Does the eye tracking interactive agent alleviate nurses' communication burden among non-verbal patients in the ICU? Researchers will compare eye tracking interactive agent to conventional techniques to see if e eye tracking interactive agent works to alleviate communication impairments. Participants will: Use an eye tracking interactive agent for augmentative communication for 2 consecutive days Document each communication's details, ICU LOS, and analgesic-sedative dosages; assess communication difficulty severity, delirium, anxiety, family satisfaction and nurses' communication burden with validated scales.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
54
The eye-tracking interactive agent consists of an eye-tracker, an iPad, and a floor-standing stand. Positioned at the patient's bedside, the system is activated upon the patient's eye opening, allowing the patient to vocalize via this eye-tracking interactive system.
Nurses communicate with patients through verbal inquiry, hand gestures, head nods or shakes, and simple paper-and-pencil tools; patients unable to write communicate solely via body language. Needs are guessed only when patients exhibit obvious discomfort.
Communication difficulty
The degree of communication difficulty in non-verbal ICU patients will be assessed using the Ease of Communication Scale. This tool was revised by Menzel et al. in 1998 and has previously been used to assess communication difficulties among non-verbal patients in the ICU. The scale comprises 6 items, with response options ranging from 0 (no difficulty at all) to 4 (extreme difficulty). The total score ranges from 0 to 24, with higher scores indicating greater communication difficulties.
Time frame: up to 2days after enrollment
Communication efficiency
the number of successful communications within 24 hours
Time frame: up to 2 days after enrollment
Anxiety
Anxiety level will be measured using the Faces Anxiety Scale. This is a single-item scale with five response options, ranging from neutral expression (1 point) to extreme anxiety (5 points).
Time frame: at 4:00 PM daily
Delirium-free days
Delirium-free days refer to the total number of complete calendar days without delirium during the ICU stay.
Time frame: through discharge from the ICU,an average of 1 week
Physiological outcomes (heart rate)
The patient's heart rate will be recorded at the start of each communication, and the variability of heart rate during communication will be calculated.
Time frame: up to 2 days after enrollment
Physiological outcomes (blood pressure)
The patient's blood pressure will be recorded at the start of each communication, and the variability of blood pressure during communication will be calculated.
Time frame: up to 2 days after enrollment
Length of ICU stay
The total length of the patient's ICU stay will be recorded.
Time frame: through discharge from the ICU,an average of 1 week
Dosage of analgesic and sedative medications
The daily dosage of analgesic and sedative medications administered to the patient will be recorded.
Time frame: up to 2 days after enrollment
Satisfaction of primary caregivers
Family satisfaction will be assessed using the Family Satisfaction in the ICU-24 (FS-ICU-24) scale. This scale consists of 24 items and has been well validated for measuring satisfaction among family members of patients admitted to the ICU. The scale comprises two domains: satisfaction with care and satisfaction with decision-making. Each item is scored on a continuous scale ranging from 0 to 100. The domain score is calculated as the sum of all valid item scores within that domain divided by the number of valid items in the respective domain. The total FS-ICU-24 score is computed as the sum of the two domain mean scores divided by 2, with higher scores representing a higher level of satisfaction.
Time frame: through discharge from the ICU,an average of 1 week
Communication burden of medical staffs
The communication burden of ICU nurses was assessed using the NASA Task Load Index (NASA-TLX). This scale has been widely used to evaluate the subjective workload of healthcare providers and covers six domains: mental demand, physical demand, temporal demand, performance level, effort, and frustration. Each of the six domains is scored on a continuous scale ranging from 0 to 100, where a score of 0 indicates the lowest level of the domain and a score of 100 indicates the highest level.
Time frame: through study completion,an average of 1 year
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