Redirection of Care after Traumatic Brain Injury in Intensive Care: Sex and Social Determinants of Health.

IF 1.8 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Neurotrauma reports Pub Date : 2025-07-22 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1177/08977151251360617
Simone Unseld, Alessandra Nadja Herzog, Federica Stretti, Tanja Krones, Caroline Hertler, Giovanna Brandi, Stefan Yu Bögli
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Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) impairs a patient's capacity for informed decision-making, necessitating surrogate decision-makers to decide whether to continue life-sustaining therapies. Patient sex and social determinants of health (SDH)-for example, economic stability, education, and health care access-possibly affect such decisions. We aimed to explore interactions between sex, SDH, and redirection of care in a cohort of patients with TBI from a high-income, high-resource country. Adult patients with consecutive TBI admitted to intensive care were included. Data on demographics, TBI characteristics, advance directives, and SDH (civil status, living situation, dependence for daily activities, income, employment, religion, nationality) were extracted. The primary end-point was redirection of care, followed by in-hospital mortality. Differences were analyzed univariably, after prognostic score matching, and through random forest models to assess the importance of each factor. Seven hundred and twelve patients (26.4% female, median age 56) were included. Women were older, more often widowed, and more frequently dependent on help, while men had higher income and education levels. Redirection of care and mortality were more common in women, even after prognostic score matching, though the difference disappeared after adjusting for redirection of care. Random forest models identified employment status and dependence on support as key factors associated with redirection of care, while sex did not improve model performance. Our results underline the importance of SDH for prognostication of patients with TBI and suggest that it is not sex per se, but the associated sex differences in SDH that affect the frequency of redirection of care and ultimately in-hospital mortality.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

重症监护室创伤性脑损伤后护理的重定向:健康的性别和社会决定因素。
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)损害了患者做出明智决策的能力,需要替代决策者来决定是否继续维持生命的治疗。患者的性别和健康的社会决定因素(SDH)——例如,经济稳定性、教育和卫生保健的可及性——可能影响这些决定。我们的目的是在一个来自高收入、高资源国家的TBI患者队列中探讨性别、SDH和护理重定向之间的相互作用。连续TBI的成年患者被纳入重症监护。提取了人口统计学、TBI特征、预先指示和SDH(公民身份、生活状况、日常活动依赖性、收入、就业、宗教、国籍)的数据。主要终点是护理的重新定向,其次是院内死亡率。在预后评分匹配后,通过随机森林模型评估每个因素的重要性,对差异进行单变量分析。纳入712例患者(26.4%为女性,中位年龄56岁)。女性年龄更大,更经常丧偶,更经常依赖别人的帮助,而男性的收入和教育水平更高。即使在预后评分匹配后,护理转向和死亡率在女性中更为常见,尽管在调整护理转向后差异消失。随机森林模型确定就业状况和对支持的依赖是与护理重定向相关的关键因素,而性别并没有改善模型的性能。我们的研究结果强调了SDH对TBI患者预后的重要性,并表明不是性别本身,而是SDH相关的性别差异影响了重定向治疗的频率和最终的住院死亡率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
8 weeks
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