Post-Operative Ward Monitoring – Why & What Now?

Publication date: Available online 23 July 2019Source: Best Practice & Research Clinical AnaesthesiologyAuthor(s): Ashish K. Khanna, Sanchit Ahuja, Robert Weller, Timothy N. HarwoodAbstractThe postoperative ward is considered an ideal nursing environment for stable patients transitioning out of the hospital. However, about half of all in-hospital cardiorespiratory arrests occur here and are associated with poor outcomes. Current monitoring practices on the hospital ward mandate intermittent vital signs checks. Subtle changes in vital signs often occur at least 8-12 hours prior to an acute event, and continuous monitoring of vital signs would allow for effective therapeutic interventions and potentially avoid an imminent cardiorespiratory arrest event. It seems tempting to apply continuous monitoring to every patient on the ward, but inherent challenges such as artifacts and alarm fatigue need to be considered.This review looks to the future where continuous, smarter and portable vital signs monitoring on the hospital ward will be accompanied with a central monitoring platform and machine learning-based pattern detection solutions to aid in safer patient outcomes in the hospital.
Source: Best Practice and Research Clinical Anaesthesiology - Category: Anesthesiology Source Type: research