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Article Abstract

Study Objectives: Observational data suggest pediatric intensive care unit-related sleep and circadian disruption (PICU-SCD) affects many critically ill children. Multicenter trials exploring PICU-SCD have been impractical because measuring sleep in this setting is challenging. This study validates a questionnaire for caregivers to describe children's sleep in the PICU.

Methods: This prospective, multicenter, case-control study enrolled caregivers of children in 4 PICUs or in a hospital-based sleep laboratory (controls). Survey items were compiled from validated adult ICU and pediatric in- and outpatient sleep questionnaires. Control responses were compared to polysomnography to determine accuracy. A score was calculated by summing the level of disruption of sleep timing, duration, efficiency, quality, and daytime sleepiness and irritability.

Results: In responses from 152 PICU and 61 sleep laboratory caregivers, sleep survey items had acceptable internal reliability (α = 0.75) and reproducibility on retest surveys (interclass correlation coefficient > 0.600). Caregivers could not assess sleep of sedated children. Factor analysis identified 3 subscales of PICU-SCD. Control parents had good agreement with polysomnography sleep onset time (κ = 0.823) and sleep onset latency (κ = 0.707). There was a strong correlation between sleep scores derived by parental reporting to those by polysomnography ( = .844, < .001). Scores had a linear association with caregiver-reported child sleep quality. There were no site-specific differences in sleep quality. Nearly all respondents found the survey easy to understand and of appropriate length.

Conclusions: The Survey of Sleep Quality in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit provides a reliable, accurate description of inpatient sleep disruption in nonsedated children, generalizable across PICUs. It offers practical means to quantify PICU-SCD daily in future investigations.

Citation: Hassinger AB, Mody K, Gomez R, et al. Validation of the Survey of Sleep Quality in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (SSqPICU). . 2024;20(8):1251-1258.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11294136PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5664/jcsm.11116DOI Listing

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