Loading Session...

Continuous Data Acquisition is Superior to Intermittent Documentation: A Neuroscience Case Study

Back to Schedule Check-inYou can join session 5 minutes before start time.

Session Information

In a neuroscience intensive care unit, high-frequency continuous data acquisition (CDA) successfully captured a critical bradycardia episode in a patient with intracerebral hemorrhage that standard 1-minute averaged monitoring failed to record. This case demonstrates CDA's potential to improve neuroscience nursing documentation accuracy, reduce documentation burden, support timely clinical decision-making, and preserve critical physiologic data that might otherwise be lost. 

26/05/2026 14:10 - 14:40(America/Denver)
Venue : Squirrel Room CE Credit : 0.50 Available Seats : 30
20260526T1410 20260526T1440 America/Denver Continuous Data Acquisition is Superior to Intermittent Documentation: A Neuroscience Case Study

In a neuroscience intensive care unit, high-frequency continuous data acquisition (CDA) successfully captured a critical bradycardia episode in a patient with intracerebral hemorrhage that standard 1-minute averaged monitoring failed to record. This case demonstrates CDA's potential to improve neuroscience nursing documentation accuracy, reduce documentation burden, support timely clinical decision-making, and preserve critical physiologic data that might otherwise be lost. 

Squirrel Room CANNmore2026- 57th Annual Meeting and Scientific Sessions conference@cann.ca
56 visits

Session Participants

User Online
Session speakers, moderators & attendees
Featured Speaker
RN
,
UT Southwestern, Dallas, TX, USA
Nurse
,
UT Southwestern, Dallas, TX, USA
No moderator for this session!
No attendee has checked-in to this session!
6 attendees saved this session

Session Chat

Live Chat
Chat with participants attending this session

Session Polls

Active
Participate in live polls

Need Help?

Technical Issues?

If you're experiencing playback problems, try adjusting the quality or refreshing the page.

Questions for Speakers?

Use the Q&A tab to submit questions that may be addressed in follow-up sessions.