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Correction: A systematic meta-review of interventions to prevent and manage delirium in the Intensive Care Unit: Part 2 – Non-pharmacological and multicomponent interventions (Critical Care, (2025), 29, 1, (501), 10.1186/s13054-025-05726-8)

Burak Kundakci, Katherine Jones, Andrew Booth, Louise Falzon, Maria Pufulete, Ben Gibbison*, Ben Gibbison*, Katherine Jones, Andrew Moore, Paul Moran, James Long, Emma Hopkins, Claire Black, Catherine McKenzie, Sarah Smith, Michael P.W. Grocott, Kathryn R. Rowan, The OPTIC consortium

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalComment/debate (Academic Journal)

Abstract

Following publication of the original article [1], the authors identified errors in the affiliation of three authors, the institutional author list was incomplete in the HTML version, Fig. 1 was incorrect as it should read at Included ‘Full-text studies included in review (n = 32)’. Tables 1 and 2 weren’t the latest version. A reference (citation) to part 1 was not included. Both the incorrect and correct information is given hereafter. Katherine Jones, Andrew Booth and Louise Falzon are affiliated with the University of Sheffield: 1School of Medicine and Population Health, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK. The authors Burak Kundakci, Katherine L Jones, Andrew Booth, Louise Falzon, Maria Pufulete, Ben Gibbison that are also part of the institutional group the OPTIC consortium were missing in HTML version. The incorrect Abstract Conclusions section: Conclusions While some non-pharmacological interventions (multi-component care packages, early mobilization and family-based interventions) show potential to reduce delirium occurrence and duration. Multicomponent strategies, particularly those including early mobilization and family participation, appear more effective. The correct Abstract Conclusions section: Conclusions While some non-pharmacological interventions (multi-component care packages, early mobilization and family-based interventions) show potential to reduce delirium occurrence and duration, multicomponent strategies, particularly those including early mobilization and family participation, appear more effective. The incorrect Fig. 1: Fig. 1 PRISMA flow diagram The correct Fig. 1: PRISMA flow diagram Abbreviations. SR: systematic review; RCT: randomised controlled trial; ICU: intensive care unit; MA: meta-analysis. *The list of excluded articles at the full-text screening stage, together with their exclusion reasons, was provided in the Additional file 1 The incorrect Table 1: Table 1 Characteristics of included studies Author year Review type Included study design(s) N of included studies / N of included non-pharmacological RCTs Countries Inclusion criteria N of participants Review interventions Outcomes RoB Quality/Certainty of the evidence assessment Funding Findings Al Qadheeb 2014 MA RCTs 17/1 NR adults (≥ 19 years or older) admitted to an ICU 49 Early mobilization after daily sedation interruption Duration of delirium, short term mortality Cochrane RoB2; LOW NR National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health A review of current evidence fails to support that ICU interventions that reduce delirium duration reduce short-term mortality.
Original languageEnglish
Article number69
Number of pages28
JournalCritical Care
Volume30
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 11 Feb 2026

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