Trephine
AboutSpecialtiesPricingLoading...

Copyright © 2024 Trephine. All rights reserved. The content of this site is intended for health care professionals.

TREPHINE

Terms Of UsePrivacy Policy

Anesthesia and analgesiaJournal Article

17 Feb 2025

Improving Alarms and Alerts for the Next Generation of Medical Devices.

No abstract available

COI Statement

Conflicts of Interest, Funding: Please see DISCLOSURES at the end of this article.

References:

  • Koomen E, Webster CS, Konrad D, et al. Reducing medical device alarms by an order of magnitude: a human factors approach. Anaesth Intensive Care. 2021;49:52–61.
  • Storm J, Chen HC. The relationships among alarm fatigue, compassion fatigue, burnout and compassion satisfaction in critical care and step-down nurses. J Clin Nurs. 2020;30:443–453.
  • Gündoğan G, Erdaği Oral S. The effects of alarm fatigue on the tendency to make medical errors in nurses working in intensive care units. Nurs Crit Care. 2023;28:996–1003.
  • de Man FR, Greuters S, Boer C, Veerman DP, Loer SA. Intra-operative monitoring - many alarms with minor impact. Anaesthesia. 2013;68:804–810.
  • Shanmugham M, Strawderman L, Babski-Reeves K, Bian L. Alarm-related workload in default and modified alarm settings and the relationship between alarm workload, alarm response rate, and care provider experience: Quantification and Comparison Study. JMIR Hum Factors. 2018;5:e11704.

Article info

Journal issue:

  • Volume: not provided
  • Issue: not provided

Doi:

10.1213/ANE.0000000000007420

More resources:

Wolters Kluwer

Full Text Sources

Paid

Share: