KUMJ | VOL. 21 | NO. 1 | ISSUE 81 | JANUARY - MARCH, 2023
Alarm Fatigue among Nurses Working in Critical Care Setting in a Tertiary Hospital, Nepal
Regmi B, Shrestha B, Khanal S, Moktan S, Byanju R
Abstract: Background
Alarm fatigue is a well-recognized patient safety concern in critical care settings.
It occurs when nurses become overwhelmed by the total number of alarm signals
which can result in alarm desensitization and eventually contributes to missing
of serious and important changes in a patient’s condition, thus failing to respond
properly.
Objective
To find out alarm fatigue and its associated factors among nurses working in critical
care setting.
Method
A cross-sectional study design with convenient sampling technique was used to
select 56 nurses working at different critical care settings in Dhulikhel Hospital. A selfconstructed
semi structured questionnaire and nurses alarm fatigue questionnaire
was used for the survey. Frequency, percentage, mean and standard deviation were
used for descriptive statistics whereas Independent t-test and One-way ANOVA were
used for inferential statistics.
Result
The result shows that more than half of the nurses were less than 25 years, single
and more than two-third of the participants worked in Adult Intensive Care Unit.
Out of total obtainable score 44, the overall mean score of the Alarm Fatigue was
28.03±12.813. The result showed that there was no significant difference between
alarm fatigue and selected socio-demographic and work related characteristics.
Conclusion
The alarm fatigue among nurses working in critical care settings was found to be
higher in this study. Since alarm fatigue is directly related to patients’ safety, the
effective management of medical device alarms can reduce alarm fatigue and
prevent potentially dangerous outcomes.
Keyword : Alarm fatigue, Critical care settings, Nurses