6533b859fe1ef96bd12b787b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Intensive care unit strain should not rush physicians into making inappropriate decisions, but merely reduce the time to the right decisions being made

Auguste DargentFiona EcarnotJean-pierre QuenotNicolas Meunier-beillardAudrey LargePascal AndreuJean-philippe Rigaud

subject

MaleTime FactorsDatabases Factualcommunication strategySeverity of Illness Indexlaw.invention0302 clinical medicinelawicuVasoconstrictor Agents030212 general & internal medicineHospital MortalityComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSmedia_commonResuscitation OrdersAged 80 and overTerminal CaresupportGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedIntensive care unit3. Good healthIntensive Care UnitsEditorialqualityFemaleMedical emergencyof-life practicesAutonomyAdultmedicine.medical_specialtymedia_common.quotation_subjectCritical IllnessDecision Making03 medical and health sciencesQuality of life (healthcare)[ SDV.MHEP ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathologymedicineendHumansQuality (business)surrogateIntensive care medicineAgedRetrospective Studiescapacity strainbusiness.industry030208 emergency & critical care medicinefamily membersLength of Staymedicine.diseaseRespiration ArtificialcultureLinear Modelsbusiness[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology

description

The effect of capacity strain in an ICU on the timing of end-of-life decision-making is unknown. We sought to determine how changes in strain impact timing of new do-not-resuscitate (DNR) orders and of death.Retrospective cohort study of 9891 patients dying in the hospital following an ICU stay ≥72 h in Project IMPACT, 2001-2008. We examined the effect of ICU capacity strain (measured by standardized census, proportion of new admissions, and average patient acuity) on time to initiation of DNR orders and time to death for all ICU decedents using fixed-effects linear regression.Increases in strain were associated with shorter time to DNR for patients with limitations in therapy (predicted time to DNR 6.11 days for highest versus 7.70 days for lowest quintile of acuity, p = 0.02; 6.50 days for highest versus 7.77 days for lowest quintile of admissions, p  0.001), and shorter time to death (predicted time to death 7.64 days for highest versus 9.05 days for lowest quintile of admissions, p  0.001; 8.28 days for highest versus 9.06 days for lowest quintile of census, only in closed ICUs, p = 0.006). Time to DNR order significantly mediated relationships between acuity and admissions and time to death, explaining the entire effect of acuity, and 65 % of the effect of admissions. There was no association between strain and time to death for decedents without a limitation in therapy.Strains in ICU capacity are associated with end-of-life decision-making, with shorter times to placement of DNR orders and death for patients admitted during high-strain days.

10.21037/atm.2016.07.27https://hal-univ-bourgogne.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01407471