Nurse and patient factors that influence nursing time in chest tube management early after open heart surgery: A descriptive, correlational study

2017 
Abstract Purpose Determine nurse characteristics and patient factors that affect nurses’ time in managing chest tubes in the first 24-hours of critical-care stay. Design Prospective, descriptive. Methods Cardiovascular critical-care nurses and post-operative heart surgery patients with chest tubes were enrolled from a single center in Ohio. Nurses completed case report forms about themselves, comfort and time in managing chest tubes, chest tube placement and management factors. Analysis included correlational and comparative statistics; Bonferroni corrections were applied, as appropriate. Results Of 29 nurses, 86.2% were very comfortable managing chest tubes and oozing/non-secure dressings, but only 41.4% were very comfortable managing clogged chest tubes. Of 364 patients, mean age was 63.1 (±12.3) years and 36% had previous heart surgery. Total minutes of chest tube management was higher with ≥ 3 chest tubes, tube size p   0.001). In the first 4-hours, time spent on chest tubes was higher when patients had previous cardiac surgeries ( p  ≤ 0.002), heart failure ( p  p  = 0.031) and reoperation for postoperative bleeding/tamponade ( p  = 0.005). Conclusions Time to manage chest tubes can be anticipated by patient characteristics. Nurse comfort with chest tube-related tasks affected time spent on chest tube management.
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