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Protocols and Hospital Mortality in Critically Ill Patients

Authors :
Jonathan E, Sevransky
William, Checkley
Phabiola, Herrera
Brian W, Pickering
Juliana, Barr
Samuel M, Brown
Steven Y, Chang
David, Chong
David, Kaufman
Richard D, Fremont
Timothy D, Girard
Jeffrey, Hoag
Steven B, Johnson
Mehta P, Kerlin
Janice, Liebler
James, O'Brien
Terence, O'Keefe
Pauline K, Park
Stephen M, Pastores
Namrata, Patil
Anthony P, Pietropaoli
Maryann, Putman
Todd W, Rice
Leo, Rotello
Jonathan, Siner
Sahul, Sajid
David J, Murphy
Greg S, Martin
Joanne, Ondrush
Source :
Critical Care Medicine. 43:2076-2084
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2015.

Abstract

Objective: Clinical protocols may decrease unnecessary variation in care and improve compliance with desirable therapies. We evaluated whether highly protocolized ICUs have superior patient outcomes compared with less highly protocolized ICUs. Design: Observational study in which participating ICUs completed a general assessment and enrolled new patients 1 day each week. Patients: A total of 6,179 critically ill patients. Setting: Fifty-nine ICUs in the United States Critical Illness and Injury Trials Group Critical Illness Outcomes Study. Interventions: None. Measurements and Main Results: The primary exposure was the number of ICU protocols; the primary outcome was hospital mortality. A total of 5,809 participants were followed prospectively, and 5,454 patients in 57 ICUs had complete outcome data. The median number of protocols per ICU was 19 (interquartile range, 15–21.5). In single-variable analyses, there were no differences in ICU and hospital mortality, length of stay, use of mechanical ventilation, vasopressors, or continuous sedation among individuals in ICUs with a high versus low number of protocols. The lack of association was confirmed in adjusted multivariable analysis (p = 0.70). Protocol compliance with two ventilator management protocols was moderate and did not differ between ICUs with high versus low numbers of protocols for lung protective ventilation in acute respiratory distress syndrome (47% vs 52%; p = 0.28) and for spontaneous breathing trials (55% vs 51%; p = 0.27). Conclusions: Clinical protocols are highly prevalent in U.S. ICUs. The presence of a greater number of protocols was not associated with protocol compliance or patient mortality.

Details

ISSN :
00903493
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Critical Care Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4fa123c87117f50087d8c7e06d054b81