Changeflow GovPing Healthcare & Life Sciences PROTECT-ICU: ICU Staff Training to Reduce PICS
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PROTECT-ICU: ICU Staff Training to Reduce PICS

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Summary

NIH registered clinical trial NCT07542613 for PROTECT-ICU, a study examining whether structured training programs for intensive care unit staff can reduce post-intensive care syndrome (PICS) in adults. The trial will compare the standard ABCDEF care bundle against an expanded A-Z bundle including additional practices such as nutrition, sleep, infection prevention, and psychological support.

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What changed

NIH registered a new clinical trial on ClinicalTrials.gov. PROTECT-ICU is an observational study that will enroll adults in intensive care settings to evaluate whether structured staff training on care practices reduces the incidence of post-intensive care syndrome (PICS), which includes new or worsening physical, cognitive, and emotional problems following critical illness. The study will compare outcomes between ICUs using standard ABCDEF bundle training versus those using an expanded A-Z approach including additional components such as nutrition, sleep hygiene, infection prevention, safety measures, and psychosocial support.

Healthcare institutions conducting ICU research should note this registry entry as background context on evolving post-ICU care protocols. The trial's results may inform future evidence-based practice recommendations but do not create any immediate compliance obligations for healthcare providers or institutions.

Archived snapshot

Apr 22, 2026

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"PROTECT-ICU: Impact of an Educational Intervention

N/A NCT07542613 Kind: NA Apr 21, 2026

Abstract

Brief Summary

The goal of this study is to learn if a structured training program for intensive care unit (ICU) staff can reduce health problems after a stay in the ICU in adults.

These health problems are called post-intensive care syndrome (PICS). PICS includes new or worse physical, thinking, or emotional problems after a serious illness. These problems can affect daily activities, independence, memory, mood, and overall quality of life.

The main questions this study aims to answer are:

Does a training program for ICU staff reduce the number of people who develop PICS three months after leaving the hospital? Does the training improve how often ICU teams apply recommended care practices in daily care?

Researchers will compare patients treated before and after the training program to see if the training reduces PICS.

Researchers will also compare ICUs that receive training on the standard ABCDEF care bundle with those that receive training on an expanded care bundle (A-Z), which includes additional practices such as nutrition, sleep, infection prevention, safety measures, and psychological and social support, to see if the expanded approach provides additional benefits.

Before the training program, participating ICUs will collect information about their usual care. ICU staff will then complete the assigned training program. After the training, ICUs will continue to provide usual care, and researchers will record how often the trained care practices are used in dail...

Conditions: Post Intensive Care Syndrome (PICS), Critical Illness

Interventions: Standardized Training on the ABCDEF Care Bundle (A-F), Standardized training on the expanded ABCDEF care bundle (A-Z)

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
NIH
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers
Industry sector
6221 Hospitals & Health Systems
Activity scope
Clinical research ICU staff training
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Public Health

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