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The purpose of this study is to test the effect of a twice daily, 60-minute, nurse initiated, music listening intervention on patients followed in the ICU with MV support as compared to patients who receive care as usual and ear plugs.
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Delirium is an acute disorder of consciousness and cognitive function that occurs frequently in critical care settings. Many critically ill patients (e.g., up to 80% of patients) experience ICU delirium due to underlying medical or surgical health problems, recent surgical or other invasive procedures, medications, or various noxious stimuli (e.g., underlying psychological stressors, mechanical ventilation [MV], noise, light, patient care interactions, and drug-induced sleep disruption or deprivation). Delirium contributes to adverse outcomes such as increased mortality and morbidity, longer length of ICU stays, prolonged MV, costlier hospitalizations, and cognitive impairment after hospital discharge. The Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCMM) Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Prevention and Management of Pain, Agitation/Sedation, Delirium, Immobility, and Sleep Disruption in Adult Patients in the ICU (PADIS) recommend non-pharmacological interventions of preventing delirium and other symptoms. Music, which is one of the non-pharmacological applications, is one of the cognitive-behavioral treatment methods applied in the field of ICU as in many other fields. Music is easy method to apply and has no side effects and contributes to physical, psychological, emotional and spiritual healing. In the literature, it is seen that music intervention studies applied to patients followed in the ICU mostly focus on the effects on anxiety, pain, non-invasive ventilation tolerance, and stress response (heart rate, blood pressure, respiratory rate). The relationship between intensive care delirium and all these symptoms (pain, agitation, anxiety, stress response, etc.) and their interaction with each other have been clarified in the light of evidence-based guidelines and studies. Therefore, the aim of this study is to examine the effects of music applied to patients followed in the ICU with MV support on delirium, pain, need for sedation, anxiety and vital parameters.
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37 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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