Variation in Severity-Adjusted Resource use and Outcome for Neurosurgical Emergencies in the Intensive Care Unit

被引:2
|
作者
Raj, Rahul [1 ,2 ]
Moser, Andre [3 ]
Starkopf, Joel [4 ,5 ]
Reinikainen, Matti [6 ,7 ]
Varpula, Tero [8 ,9 ]
Jakob, Stephan M. [10 ]
Takala, Jukka [10 ]
机构
[1] Helsinki Univ Hosp, Dept Neurosurg, Helsinki, Finland
[2] Univ Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
[3] Univ Bern, CTU Bern, Bern, Switzerland
[4] Univ Tartu, Anaesthesiol & Intens Care Clin, Tartu, Estonia
[5] Tartu Univ Hosp, Tartu, Estonia
[6] Kuopio Univ Hosp, Dept Anesthesiol & Intens Care, Kuopio, Finland
[7] Univ Eastern Finland, Kuopio, Finland
[8] Univ Helsinki, Div Intens Care, Helsinki, Finland
[9] Helsinki Univ Hosp, Helsinki, Finland
[10] Univ Bern, Bern Univ Hosp, Dept Intens Care Med, Bern, Switzerland
关键词
Intensive care; Critical care; Traumatic brain injury; Subarachnoid hemorrhage; Intracerebral hemorrhage; Costs; NEUROCRITICAL CARE; ASSOCIATION; ADMISSION; PATIENT; COSTS;
D O I
10.1007/s12028-023-01723-3
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
BackgroundThe correlation between the standardized resource use ratio (SRUR) and standardized hospital mortality ratio (SMR) for neurosurgical emergencies is not known. We studied SRUR and SMR and the factors affecting these in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI), nontraumatic intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), and subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH).MethodsWe extracted data of patients treated in six university hospitals in three countries (2015-2017). Resource use was measured as SRUR based on purchasing power parity-adjusted direct costs and either intensive care unit (ICU) length of stay (costSRUR(length of stay)) or daily Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System scores (costSRUR(Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System)). Five a priori defined variables reflecting differences in structure and organization between the ICUs were used as explanatory variables in bivariable models, separately for the included neurosurgical diseases.ResultsOut of 28,363 emergency patients treated in six ICUs, 6,162 patients (22%) were admitted with a neurosurgical emergency (41% nontraumatic ICH, 23% SAH, 13% multitrauma TBI, and 23% isolated TBI). The mean costs for neurosurgical admissions were higher than for nonneurosurgical admissions, and the neurosurgical admissions corresponded to 23.6-26.0% of all direct costs related to ICU emergency admissions. A higher physician-to-bed ratio was associated with lower SMRs in the nonneurosurgical admissions but not in the neurosurgical admissions. In patients with nontraumatic ICH, lower costSRURs were associated with higher SMRs. In the bivariable models, independent organization of an ICU was associated with lower costSRURs in patients with nontraumatic ICH and isolated/multitrauma TBI but with higher SMRs in patients with nontraumatic ICH. A higher physician-to-bed ratio was associated with higher costSRURs for patients with SAH. Larger units had higher SMRs for patients with nontraumatic ICH and isolated TBI. None of the ICU-related factors were associated with costSRURs in nonneurosurgical emergency admissions.ConclusionsNeurosurgical emergencies constitute a major proportion of all emergency ICU admissions. A lower SRUR was associated with higher SMR in patients with nontraumatic ICH but not for the other diagnoses. Different organizational and structural factors seemed to affect resource use for the neurosurgical patients compared with nonneurosurgical patients. This emphasizes the importance of case-mix adjustment when benchmarking resource use and outcomes.
引用
收藏
页码:251 / 261
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] A review of stress ulcer prophylaxis in the neurosurgical intensive care unit
    Lu, WY
    Rhoney, DH
    Boling, WB
    Johnson, JD
    Johnson, D
    Smith, T
    NEUROSURGERY, 1997, 41 (02) : 416 - 425
  • [22] Does intensive care unit severity of illness influence recall of baseline physical function?
    Dinglas, Victor D.
    Gellar, Jonathan
    Colantuoni, Elizabeth
    Stan, Vanessa A.
    Mendez-Tellez, Pedro A.
    Pronovost, Peter J.
    Needham, Dale M.
    JOURNAL OF CRITICAL CARE, 2011, 26 (06) : 634.e1 - 634.e7
  • [23] Growth of intensive care unit resource use and its estimated cost in Medicare
    Milbrandt, Eric B.
    Kersten, Alexander
    Rahim, Malik T.
    Dremsizov, Tony T.
    Clermont, Gilles
    Cooper, Liesl M.
    Angus, Derek C.
    Linde-Zwirble, Walter T.
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2008, 36 (09) : 2504 - 2510
  • [24] INTENSIVE-CARE UNIT RESOURCE UTILIZATION
    BUIST, M
    ANAESTHESIA AND INTENSIVE CARE, 1994, 22 (01) : 46 - 60
  • [25] Realistic Survival Outcomes After Vasopressor Use in the Intensive Care Unit
    Farkas, Daniel T.
    Rahnemai-Azar, Amir A.
    Kunhammed, Shameem Shah
    Greenbaum, Arieh
    Bibi, Shahida
    John, Mohan Mathew
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HOSPICE & PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 2016, 33 (09): : 871 - 874
  • [26] Management of traumatic brain injury in the non-neurosurgical intensive care unit: a narrative review of current evidence
    Wiles, M. D.
    Braganza, M.
    Edwards, H.
    Krause, E.
    Jackson, J.
    Tait, F.
    ANAESTHESIA, 2023, 78 (04) : 510 - 520
  • [27] Impact of intensive care unit discharge time on patient outcome
    Priestap, Fran A.
    Martin, Claudio M.
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2006, 34 (12) : 2946 - 2951
  • [28] Neurosurgical intensive care unit-essential for good outcomes in neurosurgery?
    Lang, Josef M.
    Meixensberger, Juergen
    Unterberg, Andreas W.
    Tecklenburg, Andreas
    Krauss, Joachim K.
    LANGENBECKS ARCHIVES OF SURGERY, 2011, 396 (04) : 447 - 451
  • [29] NEUROSURGICAL INTENSIVE-CARE UNIT ORGANIZATION AND FUNCTION - AN AMERICAN EXPERIENCE
    HYMAN, SA
    WILLIAMS, V
    MACIUNAS, RJ
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1993, 5 (02) : 71 - 80
  • [30] Winter excess mortality in intensive care in the UK: an analysis of outcome adjusted for patient case mix and unit workload
    David A. Harrison
    Panuwat Lertsithichai
    Anthony R. Brady
    James R. Carpenter
    Kathy Rowan
    Intensive Care Medicine, 2004, 30 : 1900 - 1907