Health care professionals' knowledge of commonly used sedative, analgesic and neuromuscular drugs: A single center (Rambam Health Care Campus), prospective, observational survey.

BACKGROUND:Pain management and sedation are important aspects in the treatment of hospitalized patients, especially those mechanically ventilated. In many hospitals, such patients are treated not only in intensive care units, but also in other wards. In the nineteen eighties, numerous studies demons...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Danny Epstein, Yaniv Steinfeld, Erez Marcusohn, Hanna Ammouri, Asaf Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0227499
id doaj-690b2399f78a4949bdaa132e7162e079
record_format Article
spelling doaj-690b2399f78a4949bdaa132e7162e0792021-03-03T21:24:17ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01151e022749910.1371/journal.pone.0227499Health care professionals' knowledge of commonly used sedative, analgesic and neuromuscular drugs: A single center (Rambam Health Care Campus), prospective, observational survey.Danny EpsteinYaniv SteinfeldErez MarcusohnHanna AmmouriAsaf MillerBACKGROUND:Pain management and sedation are important aspects in the treatment of hospitalized patients, especially those mechanically ventilated. In many hospitals, such patients are treated not only in intensive care units, but also in other wards. In the nineteen eighties, numerous studies demonstrated a wide array of misconceptions and inadequate knowledge related to commonly used sedative, analgesics and muscle relaxants which may prevent appropriate treatment. Since these publications, multiple studies have shown that appropriate sedation and analgesia are associated with improved clinical outcomes, educational programs were developed and guidelines published. Whether the personnel's knowledge kept up with these changes is unknown. The aim of this study was to determine the current rate of misconceptions and knowledge gaps regarding commonly used sedative, analgesic and neuromuscular drugs. METHODS:In this prospective, observational, cross-sectional survey, a questionnaire was e-mailed to physicians and nurses routinely treating mechanically ventilated patients in Rambam Health Care Campus (Haifa, Israel). RESULTS:355 questionnaires were returned. 82.54% knew that midazolam has no analgesic effect. 71-72% were familiar with the sedative effect of opiates. 27% believed that propofol has analgesic properties and 30.52% thought that rocuronium has a sedative effect. CONCLUSION:Our findings demonstrate that although a lot has been done during the last decades in order to improve the treatment of critically ill patients, the rate of misconceptions regarding pharmacological characteristics of commonly used drugs is unacceptably high. We call for performance of similar surveys in other institutes and for immediate action to improve patients' care.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0227499
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Danny Epstein
Yaniv Steinfeld
Erez Marcusohn
Hanna Ammouri
Asaf Miller
spellingShingle Danny Epstein
Yaniv Steinfeld
Erez Marcusohn
Hanna Ammouri
Asaf Miller
Health care professionals' knowledge of commonly used sedative, analgesic and neuromuscular drugs: A single center (Rambam Health Care Campus), prospective, observational survey.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Danny Epstein
Yaniv Steinfeld
Erez Marcusohn
Hanna Ammouri
Asaf Miller
author_sort Danny Epstein
title Health care professionals' knowledge of commonly used sedative, analgesic and neuromuscular drugs: A single center (Rambam Health Care Campus), prospective, observational survey.
title_short Health care professionals' knowledge of commonly used sedative, analgesic and neuromuscular drugs: A single center (Rambam Health Care Campus), prospective, observational survey.
title_full Health care professionals' knowledge of commonly used sedative, analgesic and neuromuscular drugs: A single center (Rambam Health Care Campus), prospective, observational survey.
title_fullStr Health care professionals' knowledge of commonly used sedative, analgesic and neuromuscular drugs: A single center (Rambam Health Care Campus), prospective, observational survey.
title_full_unstemmed Health care professionals' knowledge of commonly used sedative, analgesic and neuromuscular drugs: A single center (Rambam Health Care Campus), prospective, observational survey.
title_sort health care professionals' knowledge of commonly used sedative, analgesic and neuromuscular drugs: a single center (rambam health care campus), prospective, observational survey.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description BACKGROUND:Pain management and sedation are important aspects in the treatment of hospitalized patients, especially those mechanically ventilated. In many hospitals, such patients are treated not only in intensive care units, but also in other wards. In the nineteen eighties, numerous studies demonstrated a wide array of misconceptions and inadequate knowledge related to commonly used sedative, analgesics and muscle relaxants which may prevent appropriate treatment. Since these publications, multiple studies have shown that appropriate sedation and analgesia are associated with improved clinical outcomes, educational programs were developed and guidelines published. Whether the personnel's knowledge kept up with these changes is unknown. The aim of this study was to determine the current rate of misconceptions and knowledge gaps regarding commonly used sedative, analgesic and neuromuscular drugs. METHODS:In this prospective, observational, cross-sectional survey, a questionnaire was e-mailed to physicians and nurses routinely treating mechanically ventilated patients in Rambam Health Care Campus (Haifa, Israel). RESULTS:355 questionnaires were returned. 82.54% knew that midazolam has no analgesic effect. 71-72% were familiar with the sedative effect of opiates. 27% believed that propofol has analgesic properties and 30.52% thought that rocuronium has a sedative effect. CONCLUSION:Our findings demonstrate that although a lot has been done during the last decades in order to improve the treatment of critically ill patients, the rate of misconceptions regarding pharmacological characteristics of commonly used drugs is unacceptably high. We call for performance of similar surveys in other institutes and for immediate action to improve patients' care.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0227499
work_keys_str_mv AT dannyepstein healthcareprofessionalsknowledgeofcommonlyusedsedativeanalgesicandneuromusculardrugsasinglecenterrambamhealthcarecampusprospectiveobservationalsurvey
AT yanivsteinfeld healthcareprofessionalsknowledgeofcommonlyusedsedativeanalgesicandneuromusculardrugsasinglecenterrambamhealthcarecampusprospectiveobservationalsurvey
AT erezmarcusohn healthcareprofessionalsknowledgeofcommonlyusedsedativeanalgesicandneuromusculardrugsasinglecenterrambamhealthcarecampusprospectiveobservationalsurvey
AT hannaammouri healthcareprofessionalsknowledgeofcommonlyusedsedativeanalgesicandneuromusculardrugsasinglecenterrambamhealthcarecampusprospectiveobservationalsurvey
AT asafmiller healthcareprofessionalsknowledgeofcommonlyusedsedativeanalgesicandneuromusculardrugsasinglecenterrambamhealthcarecampusprospectiveobservationalsurvey
_version_ 1714817091356327936