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Delirium in the hospitalized patient Jennifer A. Tarin, M.D. Department of Hospital Medicine Geriatric Health Safety Chair Colorado Permanente Medical Group UCLA Reynolds Scholar

Delirium in the hospitalized patient - Weebly

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Page 1: Delirium in the hospitalized patient - Weebly

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Delirium in the hospitalized patient

Jennifer A. Tarin, M.D. Department of Hospital Medicine

Geriatric Health Safety Chair Colorado Permanente Medical Group

UCLA Reynolds Scholar

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Delirium Preventing delirium or recognizing it early has the potential to dramatically improve safety, decrease morbidity and mortality for our patients, as well as reduce costs.

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Learning Goals

S  Why should you care about Delirium

S  Recognizing Delirium

S  Four risk factors for Delirium

S  What physicians are thinking/doing…

S  The Delirium Order set/bundle changes

S  What can you do…

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So why should you care if your patient has delirium?

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Prevalence of delirium is 14-24% at time of

admission.

Incidence in hospital (new cases) 6-56%

Inouye, SK NEJM 2006; 354: 1157-1165 Maldonado,

JR Crit Care Clin 2008; 24: 657-722

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Prevalence of delirium in the ICU is 70-87%.

Inouye, SK NEJM 2006; 354: 1157-1165

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Of the 13 million patients 65 and older hospitalized in 2002,

10% to 52% had delirium at some point during their

hospital stay.

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For 80% of patients some symptoms persist at > 6

months.

McCusker. J. J Gen Int Med. 2003; 18:696-704

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One year mortality is 35-40%

Inouye, SK NEJM 2006; 354: 1157-1165

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2 year survival may be as low as 33%

McCusker. J. J Gen Int Med. 2003; 18:696-704

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Adjusted average annual costs were 2.5 times higher

for patients w/ delirium.

Leslie DL, et al. Arch Intern Med 2008; 168:27-32

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Total annual costs attributed to delirium were $16,000-

$64,000 per patient.

Leslie DL, et al. Arch Intern Med 2008; 168:27-32

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We cannot diagnose delirium or manage and decrease its complications if we do not

look for it.

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Nurses play a crucial role in the recognition of

delirium.

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Nurses’ Recognition of Delirium

S Study compared nurses’ recognition of delirium with trained interviewer ratings

S Nurses’ recognized delirium in only 31% of patients (or 40 of the 131 patients with delirium)

Inouye, SK, Arch Intern Med. 2001; 161: 2467-2473

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Nurses’ Recognition of Delirium

S However the specificity of nurses’ rating delirium was high compared with the researchers (95.8%).

S This indicates the nurses did not over identify delirium.

Inouye, SK, Arch Intern Med. 2001; 161: 2467-2473

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Nurses’ Recognition of Delirium

Nearly all disagreements in ratings were due to under-recognition by nurses.

Pts with 3 or 4 risk factors had a 20 fold risk for unrecognized delirium.

Risk factors: S  Age over 80 S  Hypoactive Delirium S  Vision impairment S  Dementia

Inouye, SK, Arch Intern Med. 2001; 161: 2467-2473

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Nurses’ Recognition of Delirium

S Nurses’ are at the front line in the process of delirium recognition.

S Education and training are essential for detection of the key features of delirium by nursing staff.

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Who is at risk for developing delirium?

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Patients’ at risk for developing delirium

S Age 65 or older

S Cognitive impairment (past or present) or dementia

S Current hip fracture

S Serious illness

(NICE clinical guideline 103, July 2010)

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Risk factors

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Current screening outside of the ICU.

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The Intensive Care Delirium Screening

Checklist The ICDSC consists of 8 items based off the DSM-IV criteria

for diagnosing delirium.

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8 items RN’s assess for

S Drowsiness or hypervigilance

S  Inattention

S Disorientation

S Hallucinations

S Agitation

S  Inappropriate speech

S Sleep/wake issues

S Symptom fluctuations

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ICDSC

S The ICDSC has a 99% sensitivity and 84% specificity

S A score of ≥ 4 is suggestive of delirium and needs further physician assessment.

S Score will now show up on as a “vital sign” for providers.

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Diagnosis of Delirium What providers are doing/

thinkingJ

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Confusion Assessment Method (CAM)

S Developed to provide a quick and accurate way for detecting delirium.

S For non-psychiatrist trained clinicians

S Translated into 12 languages and used in over 250 original publications to date

S 95% sensitivity and specificity Inouye, SK, et al Ann Int Med 1990; 113: 941-948

Wong, et al; JAMA 2010; 304: 779-789

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CAM

1) Acute onset and fluctuating course

AND

2) Inattention

And either 3 or 4

3) Disorganized thinking

OR

4) Altered level of consciousness

Inouye, SK, et al Ann Int Med 1990; 113: 941-948

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Mini-cog test

S  Orientation: person, place (city/state, hospital), time

S  Registration: name three objects, have them repeat until they know all three

S  Clock drawing

S  Recall: ask for all three words

S  Score: 1 pt for each correct word, 2 pts for correct clock

S  Score of 0-2 suggests cognitive dysfunction; score of 3-5 suggests no cognitive dysfunction

Borson et al Geriatric Psychiatry 2000; 15: 1021-1027

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Etiologies for delirium:

S  infection (PNA, UTI, CNS),

S  metabolic (electrolytes, AKI, dehydration)

S  neurological (stroke, subdural)

S  cardiac (MI, HF)

S  pulmonary (PE, hypoxia)

S  adequate pain control

S  Medication side effect (antihistamines, TCA’s, benzos, opiates),

S  bowel or bladder dysfunction (constipation, retention),

S  drug withdrawal (alcohol, benzos, opiates)

S  sensory deficit (glasses, hearing aids)

(Royal College of Physicians National Guidelines on Delirium 2006; 1-17)

(NICE clinical guideline 103, July 2010)

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Our updated delirium bundle

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Delirium Team

S  Our team is very diverse and consists of physicians from various Exempla hospitals, psychiatry, behavioral health, nurses’, residents, clinical pharmacists, physical therapy and IT support.

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AIM statement

S  Through the implementation of a comprehensive delirium bundle we hope to decrease the incidence of delirium throughout our hospitals.

S  Secondarily we hope to decrease the average length of stay for our geriatric patients, the incidence of falls and the need for institutional care post discharge.

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Delirium Prevention

S All patients at risk for delirium should receive a multi-component intervention to reduce the likelihood of developing delirium.

S This is aided by the use of the delirium order set.

(NICE clinical guideline 103, July 2010; NEJM 1999; 340(9): 669-676)

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Yale Delirium Prevention Study

Modifiable Risk factor Intervention

Cognitive Impairment Reality Orientation

Sleep Deprivation Sleep enhancement protocol*

Immobilization Early mobilization, physical therapy

Vision Impairment Vision aids, adaptive equipment

Hearing Impairment Amplifying devices

Dehydration Early recognition, volume repletion

Inouye, SK NEJM 1999; 340: 669-679; Viden MT, JAGS 2009; 57: 2029-2036

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The multi-component intervention should address:

S  cognitive impairment and/or disorientation

S  dehydration and/or constipation

S  hypoxia and optimize oxygen saturation if necessary

S  infectious issues

S  immobility and utilize physical therapy as indicated

S  sensory impairment

S  poor nutrition

S  promote good sleep patterns and sleep hygiene.

S  review medications that could elicit or exacerbate delirium

NICE clinical guideline 103, July 2010; NEJM 1999; 340(9): 669-676

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Current Delirium Order set

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Delirium Order set

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Delirium order set changes

S  All patients at risk for delirium outside of the ICU should be screened by the nurses for delirium in the hospital on admission and at 12-hour intervals using the ICDSC

S  The ICDSC screening should occur toward the end of the nursing shift (~6PM and 6AM).

S  This will allow the nurses the majority of their shift to evaluate the patient.

Intensive Care Med 2001; 859-864; NICE clinical guideline 103, July 2010)

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Delirium order set changes

S  The ICDSC scores will populate the clinical summary and be available to clinicians as another vital sign in the accordion section of eSummit.

S  An ICDSC score of 1-3 will prompt the “At risk for delirium” plan for the nursing plan of care.

S  An ICDSC score of ≥ 4 will prompt “delirium” to be incorporated as a problem in the nursing plan of care.

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Delirium order set changes

S  If a patient has a ICDSC score of ≥ 4, the provider should be notified.

S  Patients with suspected delirium should have the dx confirmed by a physician using the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM).

S  When available and ordered by the provider, Clinical Pharmacy will perform a one-time screen of medications within 24 hours. This review will be an option providers can choose on the delirium order set.

JAMA 2010; 304 (7): 779-786; NICE clinical guideline 103, July 2010; Annal Intern Med 1990; 113: 941-948)

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So what can you do?

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Call us to discuss

S  Think about Delirium

S  Try warm milk before po Rx sleep aids.

S  Feel free to call us to discuss if concerned about delirium.

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“Restraint rounds”

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Quick review

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Who is at risk for developing delirium?

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Patients at risk for developing delirium

S Age 65 or older

S Cognitive impairment (past or present) or dementia

S Current hip fracture

S Serious illness

(NICE clinical guideline 103, July 2010)

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Summary

S  Think about delirium.

S  Remember those risk factors.

S  Use the screening tool.

S  Remember you are a very important member of the team. If concerned please discuss with the provider.

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This man is 100 years old. On October 19th, 2011 Fauja Singh, became the world’s oldest person to complete a marathon, when he crossed the finish line at 8 hours and 25 minutes.

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Delirium Preventing delirium or recognizing it early has the potential to reduce costs, dramatically improve safety as well as decrease morbidity and mortality for our patients.

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Thank you for your attention!

Questions/comments? Feel free to contact me!

[email protected]