Copula modelling of nurses' agitation-sedation rating of ICU patients Inadequate assessment of the agitation associated with clinical outcomes has an adverse impact on a patient's well being including under or over sedation. Earlier research found that the majority of nurses under-estimate more severe pain and over-estimate mild pain. Empirical distributions of the nurses' ratings of a patient's agitation levels and the administered dose of sedative are often positively skewed. Therefore, if the joint distribution is non-elliptical, then the high nurses' ratings of a patient's agitation levels may not correspond to the cases with large doses of sedative. Copulas measure nonlinear dependencies capturing the dependence between skewed distributions. Therefore, we propose to use a copula-based dependence measure between the nurses' rating of patients' agitation level and the automated sedation dose to identify the patient-specific thresholds that separate the regions of mild and severe agitation. Delineating the regions with different agitation intensities allows us to establish the regions where nurses are more likely to over or under-estimate the patient's agitation levels. This study uses agitation-sedation profiles of two patients collected at Christchurch Hospital, Christchurch School of Medicine and Health Sciences, NZ. Establishing the presence of tail dependence and patient- specific thresholds for areas with different agitation intensities has significant implications for the effective administration of sedatives. Better management of agitation-sedation states will allow clinicians to improve the efficacy of care and reduce healthcare costs.
History
Start page
148
End page
161
Total pages
14
Outlet
Communications in Computer and Information Science 1150: Statistics and Data Science