Effect of Around the Clock Intensivist Coverage on Intensive Care Unit (ICU) Outcomes
NCT ID: NCT01146691
Last Updated: 2010-06-17
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
Get a concise snapshot of the trial, including recruitment status, study phase, enrollment targets, and key timeline milestones.
COMPLETED
627 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2008-10-31
2009-06-30
Brief Summary
Review the sponsor-provided synopsis that highlights what the study is about and why it is being conducted.
On the one hand, moving to a shift work model from a model in which a single intensivist becomes overworked and sleep-deprived as a result of being responsible for care both day and night, has the potential to reduce the sleep deprivation, job distress, and burnout prevalent among intensivists with standard staffing models. But, it would also require more intensivists, a serious challenge given the worsening intensivist manpower shortage. Also, there are many detrimental effects of shift work on humans, including negative effects on motor function, cognition, sleep, job satisfaction, mood, errors, and cardiovascular health. Shift work is the most common reason that Emergency Medicine physicians give for leaving that field. The physical availability of an intensivist around-the-clock might also influence the problems mentioned of family dissatisfaction with communication in ICUs, and poor communication/ teamwork with physicians often perceived by ICU nurses. In ICUs of teaching hospitals, where relatively inexperienced house officers typically remain in the ICU overnight, the nighttime presence of an attending physician might influence residents' perceptions of domains such as teaching, and clinical autonomy.
This purpose of this study is to rigorously compare the effects of two different intensivist staffing models, specifically the current standard model, and a 24-7 staffing model enabled via shift work. This study will be conducted in two ICUs, one academic with house officers who remain in ICU overnight (the Medical ICU at Health Sciences Center), and one in a community hospital which currently lacks overnight, in-ICU physicians (the Victoria General Hospital).
This study is designed to improve upon both prior studies. To obviate the problems with using historical controls inherent in those before-vs-after study designs, our study will alternate the two staffing models (e.g. A-B-A-B). Also, the investigators will rigorously assess the effect of 24 hour intensivist presence on all major stakeholders, i.e. patients, families, intensivists, nurses, and house officers.
Related Clinical Trials
Explore similar clinical trials based on study characteristics and research focus.
Multicenter Intensivist Weekend Scheduling Study
NCT01145443
Impact of Resident Participation in Post-ICU Follow Up Clinic
NCT05713669
Differences in Care Provided in Intensive Care Units (ICUs) With Physician Versus Nurse Practitioner First Responders
NCT01323816
Critical Illness Outcomes Study
NCT01109719
Burnout and Approach to Bereavement Initiatives in a Medical Intensive Care Unit (ICU)
NCT03398460
Detailed Description
Dive into the extended narrative that explains the scientific background, objectives, and procedures in greater depth.
The investigators will directly compare 2 distinct models of intensivist coverage in the 2 participating ICUs in Winnipeg:
A) The standard model: A single intensivist staffs an ICU for 7 days. He/she will is present during daytime hours, and takes call from home afterwards. This is the current staffing paradigm in both participating ICUs.
B) The 24-7 in-house coverage model: 24-7 in-hospital coverage by an intensivist is enabled by splitting each 24 hour period into two shifts. There will, as in the standard model, be a single intensivist covering the ICU during the day shifts for one week. The day shift will run 8 am to 5:30 pm on weekdays, and 8 am to 3 pm on Saturday and Sunday. The night shift intensivist will arrive and take over at 5:30 pm on weekdays, and 3 pm on weekends and remain in the hospital until 8 am. Call rooms will be provided to allow the night shift intensivist to sleep, if the workload permits.
The interventional part of the study will last 32 weeks, comprising 4 blocks of 8 weeks each. It will run from October 2008 until June 2009. During each 8 week block, each ICU will be staffed under model A or B. Thus we will alternate the models: A-B-A-B in one ICU, and B-A-B-A in the other. This alternating design obviates the problem with historical controls; any nonrandom difference between the two staffing models should be seen to come and go in this design.
A variety of outcomes will be compared between the two intensivist staffing models. The primary outcome, which is the one for which the sample size analysis was performed, is the intensivists' burnout scores.
In order to avoid contamination between the staffing models, patients (and family participants) whose ICU stay is long enough to include time under both models will be excluded from analysis. Also excluded will be patients who are directly transferred from one ICU in Winnipeg to another. For patients who are admitted more than once to a participating ICU during the study, only the initial ICU admission will be included in the analysis.
The intensivists rotate on a weekly basis, and they will be provided questionnaires at the end of each week of ICU service. ICU nurses will be surveyed at the end of each 8 week block of a given staffing model. House officers in the ICU at HSC rotate on a 4 week basis, and they will be provided questionnaires at the end of their final week of their ICU rotations.
Even though the study design makes it likely (apart from the possibility of seasonal differences over the 32 weeks of the study) that participants' characteristics will be balanced between the two staffing models, this is not a randomized study and our primary analysis will use regression modeling to adjust for baseline characteristics of subjects. The investigators will use ordinary least squares or quantile regression for continuous variables, and logistic regression for binary variables. This approach permits assessment for differential effects between the two sites by including: (i) an indicator variable representing the separate sites, and (ii) interaction terms between that indicator variable and other covariates. A relevant aspect of the analysis is that outcomes for the intensivists, nurses and house officers derive from questionnaires, and that a single individual could complete the questionnaire more than once. Regression using General Estimating Equation methodology will therefore be used to account for correlation of responses within subjects.
Design \& Procedures - Specific Aims Specific Aim#1: To compare clinical outcomes for ICU patients cared for under the two intensivist staffing models.
• The Department of Medicine has long maintained a comprehensive clinical database of all patients admitted to Winnipeg ICUs. It contains information about patients' demographics, illness type and severity, comorbid conditions, and ICU and hospital course, including the outcomes for this study. The investigators will obtain a deidentified data file containing this information for patients admitted to the participating ICUs during the study period.
Specific Aim#2: To compare family satisfaction with ICU care under the two intensivist staffing models.
• On each day for each of the participating ICUs, the investigators will attempt to recruit the next-of-kin of one newly admitted patient. The investigators will use a 2 stage consent process for these participants. The investigators will use the Family Satisfaction Survey - ICU 24 for assessing family satisfaction with care. This well-validated tool has two subscales, and has been extensively used in Canadian ICUs.
Specific Aim#3: To compare the work-related personal/emotional burden for intensivists working under the two intensivist staffing models.
• The intensivists will be asked to complete multiple questionnaires. Before starting, and after concluding the intervention, all Winnipeg intensivists will be surveyed. After each one week rotation, the intensivists who worked that week in the participating ICUs will be surveyed. A single consent provided before beginning the study intervention will ask the intensivists to consent for all the questionnaire that they will receive. The initial survey establishes background information, and asks for their opinions and preferences relating to the two different intensivist staffing models. The concluding survey repeats those questions. The weekly questionnaires contain the items for the 5 scales that will be analyzed; four of those scales are validated. The fifth scale, Role Conflict, aims to assess an interaction that only occurs in the shift work staffing model, i.e. the interface between 2 intensivists doing shift-work. The investigators were unable to find any scale that addresses this sort of issue, and thus created the items ourselves.
Specific Aim#4: To compare ICU nurses' perceptions of working alongside the two intensivist staffing models.
• At the end of each 8 week block of the study, we will ask all nurses in the participating ICUs to complete a questionnaire. The questionnaire asks for background information, about the mix of shifts they worked over the prior 8 weeks, and includes items from 5 validated scales.
Specific Aim#5: To compare ICU house officers' perceptions of working under the two intensivist staffing models.
• At the end of each 4 week rotation of ICU house officers in the Medical ICU at HSC, we will ask them to complete a questionnaire. The questionnaire asks for background information, the number of previous ICU rotations they completed, and items from 4 scales. The Autonomy and Role Conflict scales are validated. The Clinical comfort and Education/learning scales have been previously used, but have not been formally validated.
Conditions
See the medical conditions and disease areas that this research is targeting or investigating.
Study Design
Understand how the trial is structured, including allocation methods, masking strategies, primary purpose, and other design elements.
ECOLOGIC_OR_COMMUNITY
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
Review each arm or cohort in the study, along with the interventions and objectives associated with them.
Standard staffing model
All patients in participating ICUs during the blocks of time when a single intensivist staffs a participating ICU for a 7 day period. The intensivist will be present during daytime hours, and takes call from home afterwards.
Alternative Intensivist staffing models
During the study period, each participating ICU alternated (ABAB or BABA) between two distinct intensivist staffing formats: (i) the standard staffing model, an intensivist is responsible for care in that ICU for the entire 7 days, being present during the daytime hours, and taking call from home at night, (ii) the 24-7 in-hospital, shiftwork model, enabled by splitting each 24 hour period into two shifts. There will, as in the standard model, be a single intensivist covering the ICU during the day shifts for one week. The day shift will run 8 am to 5:30 pm on weekdays, and 8 am to 3 pm on Saturday and Sunday. The night shift intensivist will arrive and take over at 5:30 pm on weekdays, and 3 pm on weekends and remain in the hospital until 8 am.
24-7 shiftwork staffing model
All patients in participating ICUs during the blocks of time when the 24-7 in-hospital intensivist coverage model is in place. This model is enabled by splitting each 24 hour period into two shifts. There will, as in the standard model, be a single intensivist covering the ICU during the day shifts for one week. The day shift will run 8 am to 5:30 pm on weekdays, and 8 am to 3 pm on Saturday and Sunday. The night shift intensivist will arrive and take over at 5:30 pm on weekdays, and 3 pm on weekends and remain in the hospital until 8 am. Call rooms will be provided to allow the night shift intensivist to sleep, if the workload permits.
Alternative Intensivist staffing models
During the study period, each participating ICU alternated (ABAB or BABA) between two distinct intensivist staffing formats: (i) the standard staffing model, an intensivist is responsible for care in that ICU for the entire 7 days, being present during the daytime hours, and taking call from home at night, (ii) the 24-7 in-hospital, shiftwork model, enabled by splitting each 24 hour period into two shifts. There will, as in the standard model, be a single intensivist covering the ICU during the day shifts for one week. The day shift will run 8 am to 5:30 pm on weekdays, and 8 am to 3 pm on Saturday and Sunday. The night shift intensivist will arrive and take over at 5:30 pm on weekdays, and 3 pm on weekends and remain in the hospital until 8 am.
Interventions
Learn about the drugs, procedures, or behavioral strategies being tested and how they are applied within this trial.
Alternative Intensivist staffing models
During the study period, each participating ICU alternated (ABAB or BABA) between two distinct intensivist staffing formats: (i) the standard staffing model, an intensivist is responsible for care in that ICU for the entire 7 days, being present during the daytime hours, and taking call from home at night, (ii) the 24-7 in-hospital, shiftwork model, enabled by splitting each 24 hour period into two shifts. There will, as in the standard model, be a single intensivist covering the ICU during the day shifts for one week. The day shift will run 8 am to 5:30 pm on weekdays, and 8 am to 3 pm on Saturday and Sunday. The night shift intensivist will arrive and take over at 5:30 pm on weekdays, and 3 pm on weekends and remain in the hospital until 8 am.
Eligibility Criteria
Check the participation requirements, including inclusion and exclusion rules, age limits, and whether healthy volunteers are accepted.
Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* ICU admissions that overlapped more than one intensivist staffing format during the study period
17 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
Meet the organizations funding or collaborating on the study and learn about their roles.
St. Boniface Hospital
OTHER
University of Manitoba
OTHER
Responsible Party
Identify the individual or organization who holds primary responsibility for the study information submitted to regulators.
Associate Professor of Medicine & Community Health Sciences
Locations
Explore where the study is taking place and check the recruitment status at each participating site.
Winnipeg Health Sciences Centre
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Victoria General Hospital
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Countries
Review the countries where the study has at least one active or historical site.
References
Explore related publications, articles, or registry entries linked to this study.
Garland A, Roberts D, Graff L. Twenty-four-hour intensivist presence: a pilot study of effects on intensive care unit patients, families, doctors, and nurses. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2012 Apr 1;185(7):738-43. doi: 10.1164/rccm.201109-1734OC. Epub 2012 Jan 12.
Other Identifiers
Review additional registry numbers or institutional identifiers associated with this trial.
H2008:233
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
More Related Trials
Additional clinical trials that may be relevant based on similarity analysis.