Clinical Trial: Effect of Auditory Stimulation by Family Voices in Preventing Delirium: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Study Status: RECRUITING
Recruit Status: RECRUITING
Study Type: INTERVENTIONAL




Official Title: Effect of Auditory Stimulation by Family Voices in Preventing Delirium Among Sedative Patients in Emergency Intensive Care Units ?A Randomized Controlled Trial

Brief Summary: Delirium is an acute cerebral dysfunction syndrome characterized by acute fluctuating changes in consciousness, cognitive dysfunction, and disorientation.
It's especially common in critically ill patients of emergency intensive care units and seriously threatens the survival and prognosis of patients and causes heavy economic burdens to the family, society, and medical service system.
Impaired verbal communication, unfamiliar medical personnel, physical restraint, spatial-temporal disorientation, mechanical ventilation and sedation medication use can lead to a lack of adequate sensory stimulation and a high risk of delirium.
Acoustic stimulation as a non-invasive non-pharmacological intervention can provide some sensory stimulation as a surrogate for critically ill patients.
This research designs the content scripts from the needs of ICU patients and families for sound stimulation.
The goal of this randomized controlled study is to test the effect of auditory stimulation by family voices in preventing delirium among sedative patients in emergency Intensive care units.