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1.
JAMA Surg ; 157(2): e216370, 2022 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34910080

ABSTRACT

Importance: Delirium significantly worsens elective surgery outcomes and costs. Delirium risk is highest in elderly populations, whose surgical health care resource consumption (50%) exceeds their demographic proportion (15% to 18%) in high-resource countries. Effective nonpharmacologic delirium prevention could safely improve care in these vulnerable patients, but data from procedure-specific studies are insufficiently compelling to drive changes in practice. Delirium prevention approaches applicable to different surgical settings remain unexplored. Objective: To examine whether a multifaceted prevention intervention is effective in reducing postoperative delirium incidence and prevalence after various major surgical procedures. Design, Setting, and Participants: This stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial recruited 1470 patients 70 years and older undergoing elective orthopedic, general, or cardiac surgery from November 2017 to April 2019 from 5 German tertiary medical centers. Data were analyzed from December 2019 to July 2021. Interventions: First, structured delirium education was provided to clinical caregivers at each site. Then, the study delirium prevention team assessed patient delirium risk factors and symptoms daily. Prevention was tailored to individual patient needs and could include: cognitive, motor, and sensory stimulation; meal companionship; accompaniment during diagnostic procedures; stress relaxation; and sleep promotion. Main Outcomes and Measures: Postoperative delirium incidence and duration. Results: Of 1470 included patients, 763 (51.9%) were male, and the median (IQR) age was 77 (74-81) years. Overall, the intervention reduced postoperative delirium incidence (odds ratio, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.77-0.98; P = .02) and percentage of days with delirium (intervention, 5.3%; control, 6.9%; P = .03). The effect was significant in patients undergoing orthopedic or abdominal surgery (odds ratio, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.35-0.99; P = .047) but not cardiac surgery (odds ratio, 1.18; 95% CI, 0.70-1.99; P = .54). Conclusions and Relevance: This multifaceted multidisciplinary prevention intervention reduced postoperative delirium occurrence and days with delirium in older patients undergoing different elective surgical procedures but not cardiac procedures. These results suggest implementing this delirium prevention program will improve care and outcomes in older patients undergoing elective general and orthopedic procedures.


Subject(s)
Delirium/prevention & control , Elective Surgical Procedures , Postoperative Complications/prevention & control , Aged , Female , Germany , Humans , Male
2.
Z Gerontol Geriatr ; 54(8): 759-767, 2021 Dec.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34817684

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Cognitive impairment is common among older patients in German hospitals (40%). Dementia, other brain diseases and frailty significantly increase the risk of delirium and pose great challenges to interdisciplinary and interprofessional teams. Delirium prevention is achievable but requires complex interdepartmental strategies with specific components for timely recognition of the individual delirium risk, to carry out structured and sustained implementation of appropriate measures for delirium prevention as well as prompt etiological diagnostics and immediate treatment when delirium occurs. OBJECTIVE: The present work aims to shed light on the role of interprofessional and interdisciplinary collaboration in evidence-based, nonpharmacological delirium prevention programs. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Narrative review of international best practice programs. RESULTS: Nonpharmacological prevention of delirium is effective but requires differentiated risk identification, regular delirium screening and daily targeted cognitive activation and sleep promotion. This can only be achieved in close interprofessional collaboration and is mostly carried out interdepartmentally by specialized teams. DISCUSSION: Interprofessional multicomponent programs for delirium prevention hold the potential to reduce delirium and complication rates in older high-risk patients in regular care, thereby improving treatment and long-term quality of life. Additional interprofessional delirium prevention teams are deployed in different settings simultaneously and provide regular training on optimal delirium management. Demonstration of the effectiveness of cross-setting programs requires large multicenter studies and is therefore particularly laborious.


Subject(s)
Cognitive Dysfunction , Delirium , Aged , Delirium/diagnosis , Delirium/prevention & control , Hospitals , Humans , Quality of Life
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