A Trial of Staff Time With Proned Patients in the ICU Using the 'BathMat'
NCT ID: NCT06844617
Last Updated: 2025-06-18
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
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RECRUITING
NA
30 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2025-06-05
2026-05-01
Brief Summary
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When in this position, doctors need to turn the patients' head and move their arms every 2-4 hours. Doctors call this repositioning. It helps prevent sores as well as other injuries. To do this, the health care team slide the patient up the bed, so that their (supported) head hangs over the end of the mattress. The head is then turned before the patient is slid back down the bed; their arms are then moved into a different position. This is currently performed by a team of 5+ staff and takes lots of time and resources. The process is also potentially dangerous because it requires a lot of movement which can hurt patients or staff.
To make repositioning easier and safer, a group of doctors and engineers have created a new device. It is like a cushion that goes under the patient and inflates. This allows staff to reposition patients without needing to slide the patient on the bed. This also reduces the number of staff needed and lowers the risk to patients and staff. Feedback from staff, patients and the public are being used to help improve the system.
To see if the new device works well in other hospitals, the investigators are planning to do a study with 30 patients in up to 4 different hospitals. This will last 14 months, and they will collect information on how well it performs. They will ask patients if they want to take part and will collect feedback after they leave hospital. During the study, staff from each hospital will monitor the device to make sure it is safe and record how useful it is. Any problems will be recorded, and staff will be asked for their opinions on how it affects their work. As well as monitoring safety, they will record the time saving achieved. This is important as it allows repositioning more often, which may reduce pressure sores. It also allows staff to spend more time focusing on other patients and important tasks. To share the results with other doctors, the researchers will write reports and give presentations. If successful, they will start making and selling the device to help sick patients on Intensive Care.
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Detailed Description
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The evidence that proning improves oxygen levels and survival rates in patients who are severely oxygen dependent on ICU is irrefutable. As such, the technique forms an essential component of national and international guidance for ICU clinicians. Complications associated with proning are well described. To mitigate the risk of complications, national guidance recommends repositioning every 2-4 hours. Greater awareness of the benefits of proning following the COVID-19 pandemic, means that the use of the technique may be more readily employed in the post-pandemic era. This increase, in combination with the unwieldy, demanding and far from risk free repositioning process (described below), means there is an urgent need to explore safer and more efficient repositioning techniques.
Repositioning is currently carried out in one of four ways:
1. The patient is slid up the bed to allow their supported head (now clear of the mattress) to be rotated before returning to the original position. This is the most common method in the UK and is recommended in national and international guidance. It requires at least 5 staff and is associated with a significant manual handling exercise.
2. A hoist can be used to lift the patient off the bed to allow repositioning whilst elevated. Hoists are large devices that require 3-5 staff to operate, they can be difficult to manoeuvre and are typically limited in number on an ICU. This approach requires the insertion/removal of slings, takes approximately the same amount of time as a manual turn described above, and can lead to unpredictable movement of the patient whilst suspended.
3. A specialist proning bed can be used. This is prohibitively expensive (£800+ per day), complicated and requires large areas for storage when not in use. This approach requires a specialist bed per patient, thereby limiting the number of patients that can be simultaneously proned on any given ICU. This approach is the least preferred and least used repositioning method.
4. Patients can be lifted by staff on the sheet on which they lie whilst one individual turns the head. This requires at least 5 members of staff and is exceptionally demanding from a manual handling perspective, particularly if patients are obese.
Repositioning is a labour-intensive task for staff on ICU but remains essential for patients. Over 1 million ICU staff hours are required in the UK each year for repositioning. This phenomenal staff drain has consequences for ICUs and is associated with several risks:
At least 5 staff are required to reposition the patient every 2-4 hours. This mandates drawing staff from across the ICU and leads to nurses having to leave other patients to support the repositioning exercise. This results in recurrent interruptions in care for other patients who are critically dependent on the drugs or machines which the nurses oversee. This practice necessitates breaches of national standards on nurse:patient ratios and jeopardises the lives of other patients.
Any adverse event of an unsupervised patient on ICU would be all but impossible to defend medico-legally; liberating nurses to care for their own patients is therefore vital.
Staff shortages on ICU in the post-pandemic era may be more significant than they were pre-pandemic, exacerbating the challenges of liberating staff to perform repositioning.
The process of repositioning is currently far from risk free. As sedated, ventilated patients are moved about the bed, there is a risk of removal or displacement of lines or tubes on which the patient's life is continually and critically dependent. This occurs in up to 12.5% of proned patients.
Improper repositioning risks damage to organs such as the eyes, liver, pancreas or genitals and exposes patients to pressure sores, which are the most common source of litigation of ICUs in the UK.
Recurrent repositioning is manually demanding for staff. Manual handling injuries cost the NHS £18bn in 2019/2020, and any device which reduces this risk will ease staffing problems and the fiscal burden on the NHS as a whole.
Staff burnout remains an ongoing challenge on ICU, deepening the staffing crisis. A device which unburdens staff will reduce burnout and staffing challenges.
The researchers have developed an Inflatable Prone Repositioning Device (IPRD) known as the 'BathMat' that improves the safety and ease of repositioning patients while reducing the number of staff and the time required. The BathMat consists of a multi-vessel inflatable pillow, placed underneath a proned patient, which can be inflated to raise the patient's chest and hips. With the patient raised, repositioning of the head and arms can occur with ease, before the device is deflated and the patient is returned to the resting position. The BathMat has four main benefits for patients and staff:
1. Repositioning of the head and arms occurs without the risks described above.
2. It reduces the number of staff required from 5 to 2.
3. It reduces the time it takes for repositioning from 30-60 minutes to 10 minutes.
4. It removes the majority of the manual handling workload.
This study is required to demonstrate the effectiveness of this device in the clinical setting, and provide data regarding its safety, useability and reliability.
This is a randomised, multicentre, single blind crossover study of repositioning in ventilated proned patients using the BathMat vs conventional care across four Intensive Care Units in England. The researchers aim to recruit 30 patients over 12 months of recruitment. This is sufficient to detect a decrease in repositioning time of at least 10 minutes with a power of over 95%.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Repositioning using standard care
Patients are repositioned while proned using standard care on each unit, every 2-4 hours.
No interventions assigned to this group
Repositioning using BathMat
Patients are repositioned using the BathMat, every 2-4 hours.
BathMat
Repositioning patients using the BathMat
Interventions
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BathMat
Repositioning patients using the BathMat
Eligibility Criteria
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Exclusion Criteria
* Awake
* Pregnant
* Under guardianship
* In their first proning session in the current ICU admission who have already been repositioned 2 or more times using standard care prior to recruitment to the study.
* Over 200 kg
* Under 150cm and over 205cm
* Patients who have already been proned using conventional methods in the current ICU admission
* Patients who have broken skin on the anterior chest or abdominal wall
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Bath
OTHER
Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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North Bristol Trust
Bristol, , United Kingdom
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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333769
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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