| Literature DB >> 20587086 |
Richard H Beigi1, Jeff Hodges, Marie Baldisseri, Dennis English.
Abstract
The ongoing pandemic of 2009 H1N1 swine-origin influenza A has heightened the world's attention to the reality of influenza pandemics and their unpredictable nature. Currently, the 2009 H1N1 influenza strain appears to cause mild clinical disease for the majority of those infected. However, the risk of severe disease from this strain or other future strains remains an ongoing concern and is noted in specific patient populations. Pregnant women represent a unique patient population that historically has been disproportionately affected by both seasonal and pandemic influenza outbreaks. Data thus far suggest that the current 2009 H1N1 outbreak is following this same epidemiologic tendency among pregnant women. The increased predilection to worse clinical outcomes among pregnant women has potential to produce an acute demand for critical care resources that may overwhelm supply in facilities providing maternity care. The ability of healthcare systems to optimize maternal-child health outcomes during an influenza pandemic or other biologic disaster may therefore depend on the equitable allocation of these limited resources. Triage algorithms for resource allocation have been delineated in the general medical population. However, no current guidance considers the unique aspects of pregnant women and their unborn fetuses. An approach is suggested that may help guide facilities faced with these challenges.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20587086 PMCID: PMC2911682 DOI: 10.1186/cc8928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Foundational concepts for maternity prioritization and allocation schema
| Gravidity and parity are not considered for priority |
| A pregnant woman's 'role in society' is not considered |
| Exception is health care workers providing direct patient care |
| No value judgments (and thus alterations in priority status) are considered on socioeconomic or lifestyle specifics of each patient |
| To be considered in the maternity schema the women must have a clinically confirmed and presently viable pregnancy: |
| Usual clinical parameters confirming pregnancy (that is, auscultation of fetal heart tones by medical provider, obvious uterine enlargement due to a fetus, visible fetal movement, and so on) |
| Ultrasound documentation of intrauterine pregnancy |
| Pregnant women with significant medical comorbidities may receive lower priority than those without (may 'screen out' when applying clinical exclusion criteria) |
Exclusion criteria for critical care resource consideration
| Severe trauma victim (otherwise precluding normal care) |
| Suffered from severe burns with either of these two criteria: |
| 40% burn of total body surface area |
| Inhalation injury |
| Cardiac arrest (ongoing at time of evaluation) |
| Severe baseline cognitive impairment |
| Defined as requiring regular ongoing assistance from others |
| Advanced significant and/or untreatable neurological disease with major functional impairment |
| Presence of metastatic and/or terminal cancer |
| Advance immunocompromised state, for example: |
| End-stage renal disease |
| AIDS |
| Status post-organ transplant requiring ongoing immunosuppressive therapy |
| Evidence of end-stage organ failure: |
| Heart: NYHA class 3 or 4 heart failure |
| Lungs: COPD requiring chronic oxygen therapy, cystic fibrosis with baseline PaO2 <55 mmHg, primary pulmonary hypertension with pulmonary arterial pressure >50 mmHg |
| Liver: current liver failure or chronic liver disease with Child-Pugh score ≥7 |
| Kidney: renal failure requiring dialysis |
COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; NYHA, New York Heart Classification. Adapted with permission from [13].
SOFA score parameters [18]
| Score | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PaO2/FIO2, mmHg | >400 | ≤ 400 | ≤ 300 | ≤ 200 | ≤ 100 |
| Platelet count, × 106/La | >150 | ≤ 150 | ≤ 100 | ≤ 50 | ≤ 20 |
| Bilirubin, mg/dl | ≤1.2 | 1.2-1.9 | 2.0-5.9 | 6.0-11.9 | >12 |
| Hypotension | None | MAP <70 | Dopamine ≤ 5b | Dopamine >5b | Dopamine >15b |
| Epinephrine ≤ 0.1b | Epinephrine >0.1b | ||||
| Norepinephrine <0.1b | Norepinephrine >0.1b | ||||
| Glasgow Coma Score | 15 | 13-14 | 10-12 | 6-9 | <6 |
| Creatinine level (mg/dl)c | <1.0 | 1.0-1.7 | 1.8-3.2 | 3.3-4.7 | >4.8 |
aPlatelet count considered to be due to primary condition necessitating scoring algorithm and not due to pregnancy-induced hypertension. bIn micrograms/kg/minute. cAll creatinine levels are 0.2 mg/dl lower here for pregnant patients than the general medical population given known physiologic changes of pregnancy. MAP, mean arterial blood pressure; SOFA, Sequential Organ Failure Assesment. Adapted with permission from [18].
Guide to scoring interpretation
| Category | Priority | SOFA score |
|---|---|---|
| Blue/black | Excluded from receipt of limited resources | >11 or previously excluded from exclusion criteria |
| Red | Highest priority for receipt of limited resources | ≤ 7 or single-organ failure |
| Yellow | Intermediate priority for receipt of limited resources | 8 to 11 |
| Green | Lowest priority | No organ failure - does not need resources |
Adapted from [13] with permission.
Suggested guidelines for ongoing evaluation at 72 hour intervals
| 1 Patient demonstrating clear and unanimous clinical improvement after resource allocation |
| Patient remains on ventilator (or other limited resource) |
| 2 Patient demonstrating clear and unanimous worsening despite resource allocation and need still exists for limited resource by others |
| Patient removed from limited resource and opportunity given to another prospective patient |
| 3 Patient's clinical status equivocal despite resource allocation and need still exists for limited resource by others |
| To be handled on a case-by-case basis |