OBJECTIVE: To examine organizational practices associated with higher and lower intensive care unit (ICU) outcome performance. DESIGN: Prospective multicenter study. Onsite organizational analysis; prospective inception cohort. SETTING: Nine ICUs (one medical, two surgical, six medical-surgical) at five teaching and four nonteaching hospitals. PARTICIPANTS: A sample of 3,672 ICU admissions; 316 nurses and 202 physicians. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Interviews and direct observations by a team of clinical and organizational researchers. Demographic, physiologic, and outcome data for an average of 408 admissions per ICU; and questionnaires on ICU structure and organization. The ratio of actual/predicted hospital death rate was used to measure ICU effectiveness; the ratio of actual/predicted length of ICU stay was used to assess efficiency. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: ICUs with superior risk-adjusted survival could not be distinguished by structural and organizational questionnaires or by global judgment following on-site analysis. Superior organizational practices among these ICUs were related to a patient-centered culture, strong medical and nursing leadership, effective communication and coordination, and open, collaborative approaches to solving problems and managing conflict. CONCLUSIONS: The best and worst organizational practices found in this study can be used by ICU leaders as a checklist for improving ICU management.
OBJECTIVE: To examine organizational practices associated with higher and lower intensive care unit (ICU) outcome performance. DESIGN: Prospective multicenter study. Onsite organizational analysis; prospective inception cohort. SETTING: Nine ICUs (one medical, two surgical, six medical-surgical) at five teaching and four nonteaching hospitals. PARTICIPANTS: A sample of 3,672 ICU admissions; 316 nurses and 202 physicians. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Interviews and direct observations by a team of clinical and organizational researchers. Demographic, physiologic, and outcome data for an average of 408 admissions per ICU; and questionnaires on ICU structure and organization. The ratio of actual/predicted hospital death rate was used to measure ICU effectiveness; the ratio of actual/predicted length of ICU stay was used to assess efficiency. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: ICUs with superior risk-adjusted survival could not be distinguished by structural and organizational questionnaires or by global judgment following on-site analysis. Superior organizational practices among these ICUs were related to a patient-centered culture, strong medical and nursing leadership, effective communication and coordination, and open, collaborative approaches to solving problems and managing conflict. CONCLUSIONS: The best and worst organizational practices found in this study can be used by ICU leaders as a checklist for improving ICU management.
Authors: K Lakshminarayan; C Borbas; B McLaughlin; N E Morris; G Vazquez; R V Luepker; D C Anderson Journal: Neurology Date: 2010-05-18 Impact factor: 9.910
Authors: Tyler J Loftus; Kristina L Go; Steven J Hughes; Chasen A Croft; Robert Stephen Smith; Philip A Efron; Frederick A Moore; Scott C Brakenridge; Alicia M Mohr; Janeen R Jordan Journal: J Trauma Acute Care Surg Date: 2017-07 Impact factor: 3.313