Geoffrey Paul Carden, Jonathan Wayne Graham, Stuart McLennan, Leo Anthony Celi
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: The objective of the study is to determine factors that influence the outcome of long stay patients in a general intensive care unit (ICU) and/or high-dependency unit (HDU) in a New Zealand teaching hospital.
Setting: 10-bed general ICU and 4-bed surgical HDU in a 400-bed hospital.
Study type: Population based retrospective cohort study.
Methods: All patients with prolonged stay in a high resource area (>7 days in the ICU or >14 days in either the ICU or HDU) between 2000 and 2003 were reviewed. Demographic data, co-morbidities, diagnoses, clinical events, hospital and 1-year mortality data were obtained using available databases and patient records. Multiple logistic regression analysis was performed to identify which variables are associated with death among patients with a prolonged stay in a high-resource unit (ICU/HDU).
Results: 207 patients were included in the study. Twenty eight percent died before hospital discharge and 40% died within one year of their admission. Univariate analysis showed that increasing age, APACHE II score, admission post cardiac arrest, inpatient cardiac arrest, development of sepsis and requirement for renal support therapy were all risk factors for increased mortality. However, when adjusted for age, gender and APACHE II score the only risk factor strongly associated with death was having a cardiac arrest in the ICU.
Conclusions: Prolonged ICU and/or HDU stay is associated with a high mortality rate particularly in patients with advancing age and increasing severity of illness. In this study, only cardiac arrest after a prolonged stay in the ICU and/or HDU is a strong predictor of death independent of the age and the APACHE II score.
期刊介绍:
Critical Care and Shock has its origin in the regular discussions of a small circle of intensivists from the US, Europe, Japan, and Indonesia who pioneered the international conference of critical care medicine, better known as the Indonesian-International Symposium on Shock and Critical Care, which is held annually in Indonesia since 1994. It was thought at that time that it would be worthwhile to publish a journal in critical care medicine as part of the effort to support and promote the annual conference and to share the latest advances in critical care with the potential readers in Western Pacific region that might complement favorably to the conference. The first issue of Critical Care and Shock appeared in June 1998 featuring the articles mostly from the guest speakers of the annual Indonesian-International Symposium on Shock and Critical Care. From its beginning Critical Care and Shock has been the official journal of the Indonesian Society of Critical Care Medicine. By 1999, at the Council meeting of Western Pacific Association of Critical Care Medicine (WPACCM), it was approved to adopt Critical Care and Shock as the official journal of WPACCM. Also, as of the February issue of 2001, Critical Care and Shock has become the official journal the Philippines Society of Critical Care Medicine. At present, Critical Care and Shock is enjoying increasing readership in the countries of the Western Pacific region, and welcome the submission of manuscripts from intensivists and other professionals in critical care around the globe to be published in its future issues. Critical Care and Shock is published bimonthly in Februarys, Aprils, Junes, Augusts, Octobers, and Decembers.