Problems in care and avoidability of death after discharge from intensive care: a multi-centre retrospective case record review study
Name:
Problems in care and avoidability ...
Size:
767.2Kb
Format:
PDF
Description:
Main article
Affiliation
University of Oxford; National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre, Oxford; Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust; South Warwickshire University NHS Foundation Trust; Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation TrustPublication date
2021-01Subject
Intensive care
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: Over 138,000 patients are discharged to hospital wards from intensive care units (ICUs) in England, Wales and Northern Ireland annually. More than 8000 die before leaving hospital. In hospital-wide populations, 6.7-18% of deaths have some degree of avoidability. For patients discharged from ICU, neither the proportion of avoidable deaths nor the reasons underlying avoidability have been determined. We undertook a retrospective case record review within the REFLECT study, examining how post-ICU ward care might be improved. Methods: A multi-centre retrospective case record review of 300 consecutive post-ICU in-hospital deaths, between January 2015 and March 2018, in 3 English hospitals. Trained multi-professional researchers assessed the degree to which each death was avoidable and determined care problems using the established Structured Judgement Review method. Results: Agreement between reviewers was good (weighted Kappa 0.77, 95% CI 0.64-0.88). Discharge from an ICU for end-of-life care occurred in 50/300 patients. Of the remaining 250 patients, death was probably avoidable in 20 (8%, 95% CI 5.0-12.1) and had some degree of avoidability in 65 (26%, 95% CI 20.7-31.9). Common problems included out-of-hours discharge from ICU (168/250, 67.2%), suboptimal rehabilitation (167/241, 69.3%), absent nutritional planning (76/185, 41.1%) and incomplete sepsis management (50/150, 33.3%). Conclusions: The proportion of deaths in hospital with some degree of avoidability is higher in patients discharged from an ICU than reported in hospital-wide populations. Extrapolating our findings suggests around 550 probably avoidable deaths occur annually in hospital following ICU discharge in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. This avoidability occurs in an elderly frail population with complex needs that current strategies struggle to meet. Problems in post-ICU care are rectifiable but multi-disciplinary. Trial registration: ISRCTN14658054.Citation
Vollam S, Gustafson O, Young JD, Attwood B, Keating L, Watkinson P. Problems in care and avoidability of death after discharge from intensive care: a multi-centre retrospective case record review study. Crit Care. 2021 Jan 6;25(1):10. doi: 10.1186/s13054-020-03420-5.Type
ArticleAdditional Links
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmc7789328/PMID
33407702Journal
Critical CarePublisher
BMCae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1186/s13054-020-03420-5
Scopus Count
Collections
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International