Introduction to cardiac monitoring


Practice Gap

In 2004, the American Heart Association (AHA) published the Practice Standards for Electrocardiographic Monitoring in Hospital Settings. Their purpose was to provide ‘best practices’ for hospital ECG monitoring. Among other reasons they cited:

In 2017, the AHA published the Update to Practice Standards for Electrocardiographic Monitoring in Hospital Settings: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. These standards continue highlight the importance of appropriate inpatient cardiac monitoring and interpretation in initiating care escalation and interventions. Particular attention is directed toward: the overuse of arrhythmia monitoring in some patient populations, the underuse of QT-interval and ST-segment monitoring among select populations, alarm fatigue, and documentation in electronic health records

Recent research continues to raises questions regarding the ability of healthcare providers to monitor and accurately interpret inpatient ECGs.  According to (Chen et.al, 2022), acute care nurse competence in electrocardiogram (ECG) interpretation varies widely.  They analysed 43 publications undertaken in multiple settings and countries.

Here are some their examples of studies looking at ECG competence, rhythm interpretation and the effect of interventions reported by U.S. nurses:

Authors
 Nursing experience  Intervention Findings
Blakeman et al. (2015) US cardiovascular nurses Online PowerPoint education Intervention significantly increased nurse ECG knowledge and comfort level
Brooks et al. (2016) US Nurses new to ECG monitoring who passed stanardized ECG test

A 2-day ECG interpretation course
•Test on week3
•Test on week 8

Nurse competence decreased from wk 3 to wk 8
Chronister, (2014) US RNs from CVICU and IPCU Educational content for ST-segment monitoring guidelines, practices, and case studies Significant improvement in total knowledge of ST-segment monitoring, clinical decision-making ability, and lead placement for V3 and V5 after the educational session
Crimlisk et al. (2015) US RNs from: Med/Surg, ED, PICU, L&D Cardiac dysrhythmia workshop and a follow-up clinical orientation After intervention, staff were more knowledgeable and better able to care for their patients. Staff felt more confident talking to the physicians about cardiac dysrhythmias and the appropriateness of the order for telemetry
Hernandez et al. (2019) US RNs mainly from ED, but included ICU, 23-hour observation, and Med/surg A 1-hour YouTube video Significant post-test improvement for recognition of STEMI, the need for 12-lead monitoring and J-point importance.
Nickasch, (2016) US RNs from Med/Surg and cardiac step-down units None

Nurses reported inability
to retain working knowledge (use it or lose it), uncertainty about ECG interpretation and rhythm severity. Nurses felt unable to work independent of telemetry techs

Conclusions:

 


Instant Feedback:
Nurses outside the critical care settings do not need to master EKG dysrhythmia interpretation.

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References:

Chen, Y., Kunst, E., Nasrawi, D., Massey, D., Johnston, A. N. B., Keller, K., & Fengzhi Lin, F. (2022). Nurses' competency in electrocardiogram interpretation in acute care settings: A systematic review. Journal of advanced nursing, 78(5), 1245–1266. https://doi.org/10.1111/jan.15147

Sandau, K. E., Funk, M., Auerbach, A., Barsness, G. W., Blum, K., Cvach, M., Lampert, R., May, J. L., McDaniel, G. M., Perez, M. V., Sendelbach, S., Sommargren, C. E., Wang, P. J., & American Heart Association Council on Cardiovascular and Stroke Nursing; Council on Clinical Cardiology; and Council on Cardiovascular Disease in the Young (2017). Update to Practice Standards for Electrocardiographic Monitoring in Hospital Settings: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation, 136(19), e273–e344. https://doi.org/10.1161/CIR.0000000000000527

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