Shhh...Patients Recovering

  • Share
Sleep is critical to the healing process, yet sound sleep in a hospital is notoriously difficult to come by. To get to the source of the problem, a team of nurses conducted a study at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. The nurses placed noise dosimeters in patient rooms, and two volunteered to sleep over and note bothersome sounds in a thoracic-surgery unit packed with humming equipment and monitors. Peak dosimeter readings as high as 113 decibels — roughly equivalent to the din of a chain saw or jackhammer — came during the 7 a.m. staff changeover, and the 11 p.m. changeover was also quite noisy. By adopting remedial measures — some as simple as closing doors to patients' rooms and replacing clanking paper-towel dispensers — the staff reduced noise levels more than 80%, according to the report published in the American Journal of Nursing. For convalescing patients, that's better than a lullaby.

Quotes of the Day »

BENNIE THOMPSON, Democratic Representative, on Thursday's House Homeland Security Committee hearing to determine how Tareq and Michaele Salahi attended the recent White House state dinner without an invitation
For use in rail of Articles page or Section Fronts pages. Duplicate and change name as necesssary to distinguish.