This application for a Midcareer Investigator Award in Patient-Oriented Research (K24) requests PI salary and research funds to support Dr. Happ's research to improve care and communication with nonspeaking ICU patients and extend her research mentorship opportunities through two new research projects that explore Symptom Management, Patient-Caregiver Communication, and Clinical Outcomes. Using an adaptation of the Revised Symptom Management Model (Dodd et al., 2001) and building on data from an existing R01 clinical trial, Project 1 will examine relationships between nurse-patient communication performance (difficulty, quality, successfulness), symptom management (symptom experience and treatment), and clinical outcome variables (ventilator-free days, length of ICU stay, hospital LOS). Project 2 will describe (1) families' perceptions of patient communication difficulty during critical illness, (2) families' involvement with assisted communication strategies, and (3) patient-family communication performance when ICU patients receive an assistive communication device and/or speech language pathologist (AAC- SLP) consultation intervention. In addition to advancing Dr. Happ's skill in symptom and outcome measurement in critical illness, this award will help develop an intervention to improve family caregivers' communication with ICU patients who are unable to speak. Testing associations between communication performance and symptom management will provide a theoretical structure for future biobehavioral research in critical illness. Investigator development will include consultation and training experiences with multi-site investigators and experts in symptom measurement with nonspeaking ICU patients well as attendance at the NIH Summer Institute in Clinical Trials Research. The Midcareer Investigator Award will provide protected time and additional opportunities to mentor undergraduate, graduate students and interdisciplinary junior faculty in theory building research, observational research techniques, and intervention development and testing. This award will also facilitate the interdisciplinary team building necessary to conduct a multi-site RCT. The proposed work is relevant to NINR's strategic mission in several ways: (1) improve recognition and management of symptoms by caregivers and health care providers; (2) develop interventions to improve the quality of caregiving, specifically nurse and family bedside caregiving in the ICU. ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR)
Type
Midcareer Investigator Award in Patient-Oriented Research (K24)
Project #
5K24NR010244-02
Application #
7348421
Study Section
National Institute of Nursing Research Initial Review Group (NRRC)
Program Officer
Huss, Karen
Project Start
2007-04-01
Project End
2010-03-31
Budget Start
2008-04-01
Budget End
2009-03-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$109,617
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pittsburgh
Department
Other Health Professions
Type
Schools of Nursing
DUNS #
004514360
City
Pittsburgh
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
15213
Choi, JiYeon; Campbell, Margaret L; Gélinas, Céline et al. (2017) Symptom assessment in non-vocal or cognitively impaired ICU patients: Implications for practice and future research. Heart Lung 46:239-245
Nilsen, Marci Lee; Happ, Mary Beth; Donovan, Heidi et al. (2014) Adaptation of a communication interaction behavior instrument for use in mechanically ventilated, nonvocal older adults. Nurs Res 63:3-13
Happ, Mary Beth; Garrett, Kathryn L; Tate, Judith A et al. (2014) Effect of a multi-level intervention on nurse-patient communication in the intensive care unit: results of the SPEACS trial. Heart Lung 43:89-98
Nilsen, Marci L; Sereika, Susan M; Hoffman, Leslie A et al. (2014) Nurse and patient interaction behaviors' effects on nursing care quality for mechanically ventilated older adults in the ICU. Res Gerontol Nurs 7:113-25
Tate, Judith A; Sereika, Susan; Divirgilio, Dana et al. (2013) Symptom communication during critical illness: the impact of age, delirium, and delirium presentation. J Gerontol Nurs 39:28-38
Nilsen, Marci Lee; Sereika, Susan; Happ, Mary Beth (2013) Nurse and patient characteristics associated with duration of nurse talk during patient encounters in ICU. Heart Lung 42:5-12
Radtke, Jill V; Tate, Judith A; Happ, Mary Beth (2012) Nurses' perceptions of communication training in the ICU. Intensive Crit Care Nurs 28:16-25
Broyles, Lauren M; Tate, Judith A; Happ, Mary Beth (2012) Use of augmentative and alternative communication strategies by family members in the intensive care unit. Am J Crit Care 21:e21-32
Happ, Mary Beth (2012) Caring to communicate revisited. Crit Care Med 40:1672-3
Tate, Judith Ann; Devito Dabbs, Annette; Hoffman, Leslie A et al. (2012) Anxiety and agitation in mechanically ventilated patients. Qual Health Res 22:157-73

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