A CROSS-SECTIONAL PROSPECTIVE OBSERVATIONAL STUDY ON SLEEP DEPRIVATION, IT’S DISTURBING FACTORS AND DEPRESSION IN ICU (INTENSIVE CARE UNIT) PATIENTS
AbstractPatients in the intensive care unit (ICU) frequently experience disturbed sleep, which could have negative effects. How exactly environmental factors contribute to sleep disruption in the intensive care unit is unknown. The Richard-Campbell Sleep Questionnaire was used to assess their sleep, and the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale was used to assess their depression. 500 patients in total took part in this study. Factors like pain, discomfort, light, medication administration, panic, current sickness, noise, and the ventilator can awake patients in an intensive care unit. Sleep impairment is directly related to co-morbidity. We evaluated the ICU patients’ sleep quality and divided them into groups based on how long they had been there. We specifically selected those who stayed longer than 6 days to compare their sleep quality before and after removing elements that interfere with restful sleep. In order to treat sleeplessness, it is necessary to lessen the factors that cause disruption. Using eye masks, ear plugs, music therapy (playing soft music), reducing light disturbance, noise reduction, and extra blankets has generally produced beneficial results with high-quality evidence, and no negative side effects have been reported. Depression is directly associated with sleep disturbances. Increasing the frequency of visits may give some relaxation and decrease depression in ICU patients.
Article Information
26
4887-4892
600 KB
204
English
IJPSR
A. Srinivasan *, D. N. Ashritha, R. Harini, K. Deepika and C. Andly Chedrick
Department of Pharmacy Practice, JKKMMRF’s Annai JKK Sampoorani Ammal College of Pharmacy, Komarapalayam, Tamil Nadu, India.
ashrithadhas2000@gmail.com
13 February 2023
01 May 2023
31 May 2023
10.13040/IJPSR.0975-8232.14(10).4887-92
01 October 2023