Does this patient have delirium?: value of bedside instruments.
@article{Wong2010DoesTP,
title={Does this patient have delirium?: value of bedside instruments.},
author={Camilla L Wong and Jayna M. Holroyd-Leduc and David L. Simel and Sharon E. Straus},
journal={JAMA},
year={2010},
volume={304 7},
pages={
779-86
}
}CONTEXT
Delirium occurs in many hospitalized older patients and has serious consequences including increased risk for death and admission to long-term care. Despite its importance, health care clinicians often fail to recognize delirium. Simple bedside instruments may lead to improved identification.
OBJECTIVE
To systematically review the evidence on the accuracy of bedside instruments in diagnosing the presence of delirium in adults.
DATA SOURCES
Search of MEDLINE (from 1950 to May 2010…
Topics from this paper
361 Citations
Delirium Screening: A Systematic Review of Delirium Screening Tools in Hospitalized Patients.
- Medicine, PsychologyThe Gerontologist
- 2015
To evaluate validation studies of delirium screening tools in non-critically ill hospital inpatients and provide guidance on the choice of screening tool, a systematic review of studies conducted across a broad range of inpatient settings internationally in elderly inpat patients was conducted.
Delirium in hospitalized patients: implications of current evidence on clinical practice and future avenues for research--a systematic evidence review.
- Medicine, PsychologyJournal of hospital medicine
- 2012
Delirium is an acute, preventable medical condition with short- and long-term negative effects on a patient's cognitive and functional states andMulticomponent nonpharmacological interventions are effective in reducing delirium incidence in elderly medical patients.
Screening for delirium in the emergency department: a systematic review.
- Psychology, MedicineAnnals of emergency medicine
- 2014
Delirium screening in critically ill patients: A systematic review and meta-analysis
- Medicine, PsychologyCritical care medicine
- 2012
The Confusion Assessment Method for the Intensive Care Unit was the most specific bedside tool for the assessment of delirium in critically ill patients, however, there was significant heterogeneity of the results.
A Review of Recent Clinical Trials and Guidelines on the Prevention and Management of Delirium in Hospitalized Older Patients
- Medicine, PsychologyHospital practice
- 2011
Multicomponent interventions performed by the hospital care team that address risk factors can prevent delirium in patients in medical units and those undergoing hip fracture repair, which includes attention to the depth of sedation during spinal anesthesia and the addition of regional nerve blocks to patient-controlled analgesia in orthopedic patients, both of which may reduce postoperativeDelirium.
Delirium Monitoring: Yes or No? That Is The Question
- Medicine, PsychologyAmerican journal of critical care : an official publication, American Association of Critical-Care Nurses
- 2019
The goals were to present a conversation among clinicians and researchers from different settings and to identify the evidence‐practice gaps for delirium monitoring for future research and organizational quality improvement programs.
Diagnostic Accuracy of a Rapid Checklist to Identify Delirium in Older Patients Transported by EMS
- Medicine, PsychologyPrehospital emergency care : official journal of the National Association of EMS Physicians and the National Association of State EMS Directors
- 2013
A rapid delirium checklist can identify 63% of patients withdelirium, but performed no better than the Glasgow Coma Score.
Diagnosing delirium in older emergency department patients: validity and reliability of the delirium triage screen and the brief confusion assessment method.
- Medicine, PsychologyAnnals of emergency medicine
- 2013
The diagnosis, prevalence and prognosis of delirium in an older hospital population
- Medicine, Psychology
- 2012
The DRS-R-98 is sufficiently valid for use in epidemiological research, but its moderate sensitivity and specificity make it unsuitable for use alone in clinical practice on individual patients, especially in populations where co-morbid dementia is prevalent.
Impact of delirium on clinical outcome in critically ill patients: a meta-analysis.
- Medicine, PsychologyGeneral hospital psychiatry
- 2013
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