Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Delirium: A Survey of Healthcare Professionals’ Knowledge, Beliefs, and Practices - American Geriatric Society

Objectives

To evaluate knowledge, beliefs, and practices regarding delirium of physicians, nurse practitioners (NPs), and registered nurses (RNs).

Design

Anonymous cross-sectional paper survey.

Setting

New York metropolitan area tertiary care hospital.

Participants

RNs, NPs, and physicians (N = 164).

Measurements

The survey assessed knowledge, beliefs, and practices regarding delirium and prior delirium or geriatric training.

Results

Of the 200 surveys distributed, 164 were completed (82% response rate). Of these, 61.7% were RNs, 13.6% were NPs, and 20.7% were physicians. Mean participant age was 36.3. The majority (80.1%) were female; 56.5% were white, 18.1% Asian, 8.7% Hispanic, 8.0% black, and 8.7% other. Of the seven potential barriers to delirium screening assessed, the three most frequently reported were lack of conceptual understanding of delirium (48.0%), similarity of delirium and dementia (41.4%), and the fluctuating nature of delirium (38.1%). Physicians were more likely than NPs and RNs to report being confident in identifying delirium (P = .002) and to score higher on the delirium knowledge assessment (P < .001). Participants who received geriatrics training were significantly more likely than those who did not to be confident in identifying delirium (P = .005) and to score higher on overall delirium knowledge assessment (P = .003).

Conclusion

Geriatric training is associated with more confidence in delirium screening and higher delirium knowledge scores. There is an urgent need to broaden the approach to delirium education of nurses and physicians caring for hospitalized older adults using comprehensive multidisciplinary geriatric educational models.



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