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      Among-Hospital Variation in Intensive Care Unit Admission Practices and Associated Outcomes for Patients with Acute Respiratory Failure.

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          Abstract

          Rationale: We have previously shown that hospital strain is associated with intensive care unit (ICU) admission and that ICU admission, compared with ward admission, may benefit certain patients with acute respiratory failure (ARF). Objectives: To understand how strain-process-outcomes relationships in patients with ARF may vary among hospitals and what hospital practice differences may account for such variation. Methods: We examined high-acuity patients with ARF who did not require mechanical ventilation or vasopressors in the emergency department (ED) and were admitted to 27 U.S. hospitals from 2013 to 2018. Stratifying by hospital, we compared hospital strain-ICU admission relationships and hospital length of stay (LOS) and mortality among patients initially admitted to the ICU versus the ward using hospital strain as a previously validated instrumental variable. We also surveyed hospital practices and, in exploratory analyses, evaluated their associations with the above processes and outcomes. Results: There was significant among-hospital variation in ICU admission rates, in hospital strain-ICU admission relationships, and in the association of ICU admission with hospital LOS and hospital mortality. Overall, ED patients with ARF (n = 45,339) experienced a 0.82-day shorter median hospital LOS if admitted initially to the ICU compared with the ward, but among the 27 hospitals (n = 224-3,324), this effect varied from 5.85 days shorter (95% confidence interval [CI], -8.84 to -2.86; P < 0.001) to 4.38 days longer (95% CI, 1.86-6.90; P = 0.001). Corresponding ranges for in-hospital mortality with ICU compared with ward admission revealed odds ratios from 0.08 (95% CI, 0.01-0.56; P < 0.007) to 8.89 (95% CI, 1.60-79.85; P = 0.016) among patients with ARF (pooled odds ratio, 0.75). In exploratory analyses, only a small number of measured hospital practices-the presence of a sepsis ED disposition guideline and maximum ED patient capacity-were potentially associated with hospital strain-ICU admission relationships. Conclusions: Hospitals vary considerably in ICU admission rates, the sensitivity of those rates to hospital capacity strain, and the benefits of ICU admission for patients with ARF not requiring life support therapies in the ED. Future work is needed to more fully identify hospital-level factors contributing to these relationships.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Ann Am Thorac Soc
          Annals of the American Thoracic Society
          American Thoracic Society
          2325-6621
          2325-6621
          Mar 2023
          : 20
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care, Perelman School of Medicine.
          [2 ] Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics.
          [3 ] Palliative and Advanced Illness Research Center, Perelman School of Medicine.
          [4 ] Department of Statistics, The Wharton School.
          [5 ] Center for Emergency Care Policy and Research, Department of Emergency Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, and.
          [6 ] Department of Biostatistics, Epidemiology, and Informatics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and.
          [7 ] Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, California.
          Article
          10.1513/AnnalsATS.202205-429OC
          9993147
          35895629
          df905ca4-9714-4f7a-94b2-33c6bd2966ae
          History

          processes of care,intensive care unit,hospital variation,hospital strain,acute respiratory failure

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