| Literature DB >> 25887104 |
Matthew H Anstey1,2, John L Adams3, Elizabeth A McGlynn4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Increased demand for expensive intensive care unit (ICU) services may contribute to rising health-care costs. A focus on appropriate use may offer a clinically meaningful way of finding the balance. We aimed to determine the extent and characteristics of perceived inappropriate treatment among ICU doctors and nurses, defined as an imbalance between the amount or intensity of treatments being provided and the patient's expected prognosis or wishes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25887104 PMCID: PMC4344807 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-015-0777-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Flow of hospital, intensive care unit (ICU), and providers included in study.
Characteristics of participating hospitals, intensive care units, and providers
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| Small (<99 beds) | 4 (7.1) |
| Moderate (100-399 beds) | 44 (78.6) |
| Large (400+ beds) | 8 (14.3) |
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| Not-for profit | 45 (80.3) |
| For profitc | 4 (7.1) |
| State | 7 (12.5) |
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| <10 beds | 9 (16.1) |
| 10-30 beds | 32 (57.1) |
| >30 beds | 15 (26.8) |
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| Northern California | 22 (39.3) |
| Central California | 13 (23.2) |
| Southern California | 21 (37.5) |
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| Teaching hospital | 9 (16.1) |
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| Part of hospital systemc,d | 42 (75) |
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| 12.3 (10.5-13.3) |
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| Median number of FTE ICU nurses | 45 (25.6-65) |
| Median number of FTE ICU physicians | 4 (2-7) |
| Median patient-to-intensivist ratio | 10 (8-14.1) |
| Availability of an ethics service | 44 (78.6) |
| 24-hour presence of a senior intensivist | 10 (17.9) |
| Availability of an ICU step-down unit | 30 (53.6) |
| Daily multi-disciplinary rounds | 42 (75.0) |
| Guideline or provider order entry set for end-of-life care | 39 (69.6) |
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| Median age in years | 42 (35-51) |
| Number of female respondents | 995 (73.0) |
| Professional role in the ICU | |
| Nurse | 1,156 (84.7) |
| Certified critical care nurse | 291 (21.3) |
| Registered nurse | 865 (63.5) |
| Nurse practitioner/physician assistant | 10 (0.73) |
| Physician | 198 (14.5) |
| Board-certified critical care physician | 130 (9.5) |
| Hospitalist | 11 (0.8) |
| Resident/fellow | 20 (1.5) |
| Other | 37 (2.7) |
| Type of ICU | |
| Mixed MICU/SICU | 755/1,363 (55.4) |
| MICU | 211/1,363 (15.5) |
| TICU/SICU | 171/1,363 (12.5) |
| Other (burns, neuro, cardiac) | 226/1,363 (16.5) |
| Median number of years working in ICU (IQR) | 7 (3-13) |
| Median number of hours worked per week(IQR) | 36 (32-40) |
| Number who were trained in current ICU | 799 (58.6) |
| Received formal training in talking with patients and families about end-of-life decisions | 431 (31.6) |
| Treated any patient who had a completed POLST form | 1051 (77.1) |
| Involved in any medico-legal claim, regardless of outcome (physicians/PA/NP only) | 83/206 (40.3) |
aHospital characteristics derived from Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (California). bAll data are shown as number/total number (percentage) or median (interquartile range). Owing to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%. cSignificant difference between respondent and non-respondent groups by using chi-square test at P value of less 0.05. dA hospital belongs to a system if there are more than three hospitals under the management or ownership of a central organization. eIntensive Care Unit (ICU) mortality obtained from California Hospital Assessment and Reporting Task Force (CHART) project, previously available at www.calhospitalcompare.org and is for the period October 2010 to September 2011. fICU characteristics are from data provided by the ICU manager at each site. FTE, full-time equivalent; IQR, interquartile range; MICU, medical intensive care unit; NP, nurse practitioner; PA, physician’s assistant; POLST, Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment; SICU, surgical intermediate care unit; TICU, thoracic intermediate care unit.
Prevalence of and providers’ reasons for perceived inappropriate care in the intensive care unit
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| Providers identifying inappropriate care in 1+ patients on the day of the surveyb | 447/1,169 (38.2) | 94/184 (51.1) | 353/985 (35.8) | 0.000 |
| Providers who did not identify a patient as receiving inappropriate care on the day of the survey but could identify a recent patient whose care was inappropriate | 455/859 (53.0) | 71/109 (65.1) | 384/750 (51.2) | 0.006 |
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| 271/430 (63.0) | 61/93 (65.6) | 210/337 (62.3) | 0.562 |
| Patient is too well | 117/271 (43.2) | 15/61 (24.6) | 102/210 (48.6) | 0.001 |
| Patient is dying and could be better managed elsewhere | 129/154 (83.8) | 42/46 (91.3) | 87/108 (80.6) | 0.098 |
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| 325/429 (75.8) | 74/93 (79.6) | 251/336 (74.7) | 0.332 |
| Amount of care inconsistent with expected survival | 232/285 (81.4) | 58/67 (86.6) | 174/218 (79.8) | 0.214 |
| Amount of care inconsistent with expected quality of life | 258/300 (86.0) | 67/70 (95.7) | 191/230 (83.0) | 0.007 |
| The amount of care provided is too much | 300/323 (92.9) | 73/74 (98.7) | 227/249 (91.2) | 0.028 |
| The amount of care provided is too little | 23/323 (7.1) | 1/74 (1.3) | 22/249 (8.4) | 0.028 |
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| 155/287 (54.0) | 27/68 (39.7) | 128/219 (58.5) | 0.007 |
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| 152/269 (56.5) | 37/65 (56.9) | 115/204 (56.4) | 0.938 |
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| 236/298 (80.2) | 62/71 (87.3) | 174/227 (76.7) | 0.053 |
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| 165/267 (61.8) | 42/65 (64.6) | 123/202 (60.9) | 0.591 |
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| 151/287 (52.6) | 17/67 (25.4) | 134/220 (60.9) | 0.000 |
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| 82/269 (30.5) | 9/64 (14.1) | 73/205 (35.6) | 0.001 |
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| 138/287 (48.0) | 31/70 (44.3) | 107/217 (49.3) | 0.465 |
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| 98/267 (36.7) | 12/63 (19.1) | 86/204 (42.2) | 0.001 |
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| 433/848 (51.1) | 78/161 (48.4) | 355/687 (51.7) | 0.461 |
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| 570/838 (68.0) | 75/161 (46.6) | 495/677 (73.1) | 0.000 |
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| 386/837 (46.1) | 35/157 (22.3) | 351/680 (51.6) | 0.000 |
Each provider gave answers on only one patient, even if they had identified more than one receiving inappropriate care. aAll data are shown as number/total number (percentage). Denominators may differ because of missing data (respondents chose not to answer). bOne hundred thirty-nine respondents (10.8%) declined to answer this question. ICU, intensive care unit.
Characteristics of the patients’ perceived to be receiving ‘inappropriate care’
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| 331/656 (50.5) |
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| 18-45 | 71/664 (10.7) |
| 46-65 | 159/664 (24.0) |
| 66-79 | 228/664 (34.3) |
| >80 | 206/664 (31.0) |
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| 0-7 days | 329/664 (49.6) |
| 8-29 days | 226/664 (34.0) |
| >30 days | 109/664 (16.4) |
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| Sepsis | 254/622 (40.8) |
| Trauma | 30/622 (4.8) |
| Neurological disease | 75/622 (12.1) |
| Cardiac disease | 80/622 (12.9) |
| Post-operative monitoring | 28/622 (4.5) |
| Other | 155/622 (24.9) |
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| Able to carry out normal activities | 199/616 (32.3) |
| Able to live at home but needs some assistance | 182/616 (29.6) |
| Unable to care for self, needs institutional support | 235/616 (38.2) |
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| None | 115/665 (17.3) |
| Heart failure | 250/665 (37.6) |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | 162/665 (24.4) |
| Dementia | 143/665 (21.5) |
| Active metastatic cancer | 118/665 (17.7) |
| Other | 16/665 (2.4) |
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| Mechanical ventilation | 408/665 (61.3) |
| Vasopressors | 282/665 (42.4) |
| Dialysis | 163/665 (24.5) |
| Massive transfusion | 160/665 (24.1) |
| None | 160/665 (24.1) |
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| Uncertain prognosis | 113/624 (18.1) |
| Patient likely to improve | 203/624 (32.5) |
| Patient unlikely to survive despite treatment | 308/624 (49.4) |
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| 153/561 (27.3) |
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| 350/577 (60.6) |
aAll data are shown as number/total number (percentage) or median (interquartile range). Owing to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%. Denominators may differ because of missing data. ICU, intensive care unit.
Providers’ endorsement of proposed solutions to reduce ‘inappropriate care’ in the intensive care unit
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| Mandatory family meetings at 72 hours with the intensivist and primary attending | 1,090/1,224 (89.0) | 89.5 | 348/1,238 (28.1) | 24.5 |
| Allow intensivists to control admission decisions and refusals to the ICU | 963/1,226 (78.6) | 80.8 | 569/1,238 (46.0) | 40.5 |
| Use ‘triggers’ at hospital admission ensure advance directives are known | 1,020/1,223 (83.4) | 83.9 | 578/1,238 (46.7) | 47.4 |
| Formal training for physicians/nurses in talking to families about end-of-life decisions | 1,099/1,222 (89.9) | 91.5 | (31.8)d | (32.7) |
| For patients with multiple co-morbidities/poor pre-morbid state, offer a limited trial of ICU level treatments | 943/1,220 (77.3) | 78.4 | 483/1,238 (39.0) | 38.8 |
aRespondents were asked whether the solutions listed would have a major or minor positive or negative impact on inappropriate care situations. Positive impact is the combination of major or minor positive impact. bRespondents were asked whether these initiatives currently occur in their intensive care unit (ICU). cWeighted value takes into account the sampling weight used in the sampling technique and is expressed as a percentage. dTaken from an earlier question about communication training.