Meeting
Abstract Number: 227
Hospital Medicine 2020, Virtual Competition
Background: Interventions to improve inpatient sleep rely on the ability to objectively quantify sleep; however existing methods of measurement (wrist actigraphy and patient survey) are resource intensive and impose a burden on patients. To overcome these barriers, we developed “sleep opportunity” (SLOP), a surrogate metric for sleep derived solely from the electronic health record (EHR). […]
Abstract Number: 303
Hospital Medicine 2019, March 24-27, National Harbor, Md.
Background: Hospitalized patients are often disrupted at night for routine medical care, some of which is unnecessary. These sleep disruptions have implications for patient satisfaction, delirium, mobility, immune status, as well as hospital outcomes such as length of stay and readmissions. Interventions to improve inpatient sleep would benefit from the ability to objectively measure sleep, […]