Identifying the Alarm Fatigue Status of Nurses Working in Cardiac Intensive Care Units: A Mixed-Design Study

Contact Hours 1.00

CERP B 1.00

Expires Jan 01, 2029

Topics: Healthy Work Environment, Technology, Patient Safety

Role: Staff

Fees
Member: Free
NonMember: $10.00

Added to Collection

Activity Summary

Required reading for all learners: Implicit Bias impacts patient outcomes

This mixed-methods study examines alarm fatigue among nurses in the coronary intensive care unit and the cardiovascular surgery intensive care unit, with a focus on assessing alarm fatigue levels, identifying contributing factors, and developing strategies to enhance alarm management and patient safety.

Objectives

  • Identify levels of alarm fatigue among nurses in cardiac intensive care units.
  • Analyze factors contributing to alarm fatigue in intensive care settings.
  • Describe nurses’ suggestions for reducing alarm fatigue and improving safety

Continuing Education Disclosure Statement

Criteria for Awarding Contact Hours

Learners must complete the entire activity and the associated evaluation AND read Implicit Bias impacts patient outcomes. No partial credit will be awarded.

Accreditation

American Association of Critical-Care Nurses is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation.
Provider approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing, Provider number CEP 1036, for {contactHours} contact hours.

Disclosures

The Nurse Planner has determined that no individuals with the ability to control content of this activity have relevant relationships with ineligible companies.

Activities with pharmacotherapeutic credit are to assist the APRN in fulfilling their education requirements for licensure and certification renewals.

Refund Policy

Continuing Education Activities are nonrefundable.