Association of care by a non-medical intensive care unit provider team with outcomes of medically critically ill patients

被引:0
|
作者
Sinyagovskiy, Pavel [1 ]
Warde, Prem R. [2 ]
Shukla, Bhavarth [3 ]
Parekh, Dipen J. [4 ]
Ferreira, Tanira [5 ]
Gershengorn, Hayley B. [5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Yuma Reg Med Ctr, Yuma, AZ 85364 USA
[2] Univ Miami, Care Transformat, Hosp & Clin, Miami, FL USA
[3] Univ Miami, Miller Sch Med, Dept Med, Div Infect Dis, Miami, FL USA
[4] Univ Miami, Div Urol, Dept Med, Miller Sch Med, Miami, FL USA
[5] Univ Miami, Div Pulm Crit Care & Sleep Med, Dept Med, Miller Sch Med, Miami, FL USA
[6] Albert Einstein Coll Med, Div Crit Care Med, Bronx, NY 10467 USA
关键词
Intensive care unit; Internal medicine; Patient care team; Mortality; Length of stay; Critical care outcomes; MORTALITY; DELIVERY; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1016/j.jcrc.2021.12.016
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Objective: To determine the association of boarding of critically ill medical patients on non-medical intensive care unit (ICU) provider teams with outcomes. Design: A retrospective cohort study. Setting: ICUs in a tertiary academic medical center. Patients: Patients with medical critical illness. Interventions: None. Measurement and main results: We compared outcomes for critically ill medical patients admitted to a nonmedical specialty ICU team (April 1 - August 30, 2020) with those admitted to the medical ICU team (January 1, 2018 -March 31, 2020). The primary outcome was hospital mortality; secondary outcomes were hospital length of stay (LOS) and hospital disposition for survivors. Our cohort consisted of 1241 patients admitted to the medical ICU team and 230 admitted to non-medical ICU teams. Unadjusted hospital mortality (medical ICU, 38.8% vs non-medical ICU, 42.2%, p = 0.33) and hospital LOS (7.4 vs 7.4 days, p = 0.96) were similar between teams. Among survivors, more non-medical ICU team patients were discharged home (72.6% vs 82.0%, p = 0.024). After multivariable adjustment, we found no difference in mortality, LOS, or home discharge between teams. However, among hospital survivors, admission to a nonmedical ICU team was associated with a longer LOS (regression coefficient [95% CI] for log-transformed hospital LOS: 0.23 [0.05,0.40], p = 0.022). Certain subgroups-patients aged 50-64 years (odds-ratio [95% CI]: 4.22 [1.84,9.65], p = 0.001), with <= 10 comorbidities (0-5: 2.78 (1.11,6.95], p = 0.029; 6-10: 6.61 [1.38,31.71], p = 0.018), without acute respiratory failure (1.97 [1.20,3.23], p = 0.008)-had higher mortality when admitted to non-medical ICU teams. Conclusions: We found no association between admission to non-medical ICU team and mortality for medically critically ill patients. However, survivors experienced longer hospital LOS when admitted to non-medical ICU teams. Middle-aged patients, those with low comorbidity burden, and those without respiratory failure had higher mortality when admitted to non-medical ICU teams. (c) 2021 Published by Elsevier Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:129 / 135
页数:7
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