“…Similarly, some nurses (Steinseth et al, 2018) reported the Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU (CAM-ICU) for delirium assessment as unbiased and reliable. Barriers associated with use of the tool included perceptions of use as busy work (DiLibero et al, 2016), imperfect but adequate (Jung et al, 2013), unreliable and not trusted (Steinseth et al, 2018;Zamoscik et al, 2017), (Gélinas et al, 2014); clinically useful (Phillips et al, 2019) (−) no correlation between pain level and tool total score (Gélinas et al, 2014;Phillips et al, 2019) Delirium (+) unbiased and reliable (Steinseth et al, 2018); 80% understood tool was valid with ventilated patients (Swan, 2014) (−) "busy work" (DiLibero et al, 2016); imperfect tool but adequate (Jung et al, 2013); tool unreliable/not trusted (Steinseth et al, 2018;Zamoscik et al, 2017); tool inaccurate (Gloger et al, 2019); potentially harmful to patients (Oxenbøll-Collet et al, 2018); questions are too random, questionable reliability and consistency of users (Powell et al, 2019) Pain, agitation/ delirium (+) increases quality, continuity, and consistency (Wøien & Bjørk, 2013) CONSTRUCT: Relative Advantage -Nurses' perceptions of the advantage of using the tool(s) versus an alternative solution.…”