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Jason P. Lott, Theodore J. Iwashyna, Jason D. Christie, David A. Asch, Andrew A. Kramer, and Jeremy M. Kahn Am J Respir Crit Care Med Vol 179. pp 676–683, 2009
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ICU organization varies widely across hospitals a wide range of diagnoses and procedures ‘‘General’’ ICUs “Specialty” ICUs - diagnosis-specific care for select populations of critically ill - improve outcomes by reducing diagnostic variability and focusing nursing expertise within a unit - lower levels of diagnostic diversity decreased mortality
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The relationship between ICU specialization and patient outcomes incompletely characterized Understanding the impact of specialty ICUs on patient mortality optimizing the allocation of limited hospital resources Specialized critical care increased administrative costs or efforts to standardize the organization and management of critical care
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To determine the association between specialty ICU care and hospital mortality and ICU length of stay in a diverse population of critically ill patients
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Retrospective cohort study using the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) IV database APACHE - a voluntary clinical information system that provides risk-adjusted outcome data to participating United States hospitals - contains detailed clinical, physiologic, and demographic information on all patients admitted to the ICU
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Specialty ICUs : surgical ICUs, medical ICUs, neurological ICUs, cardiothoracic surgery ICUs, and cardiac care units different outcomes depending on whether or not they are in the right specialty ICU or another type of specialty ICU
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‘‘ideal’’ specialty ICU - abdominal surgery surgical ICU - acute myocardial infarction cardiac care unit - cardiac surgery cardiothoracic surgery ICU - intracranial hemorrhage neurological ICU - ischemic stroke neurological ICU - pneumonia medical ICU. Patients admitted to a specialty ICU that was not the ideal specialty ICU a ‘‘non-ideal’’ specialty ICU general ICU, ideal specialty ICU, and non-ideal specialty ICU.
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Primary outcome variables : in-hospital mortality and ICU length of stay Potential confounders : age, gender, severity of illness (as measured by APACHE III score), admission source, pre-ICU length of stay, mechanical ventilation status on admission, teaching status of hospital, region of within the United Status (Northeast, Southeast, Midwest, or West), and annual diagnosis-specific volume (i.e., the average annual number of patients within each diagnostic category in each ICU)
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Admission to an ideal specialty ICU - not associated with improved risk-adjusted survival compared with admission to a general ICU No consistent relationship between specialization and ICU length of stay no survival or length of stay benefit compared with general ICUs for patients with the selected conditions
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Several reasons why specialization might fail to improve survival in the ICU - Critical illness syndromes(acute respiratory failure, acute lung injury, and sepsis) common to all ICU patients - Critically ill patients with different underlying diagnoses more alike obviating the need for specialized care - Intensivist physicians, multidisciplinary care teams, protocolized care
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Important implications for the organization of critical services - Hospitals use different care models for critically ill patients a single general ICU, several specialty ICUs, a combination of the two (e.g. a general ICU and a cardiac care unit) costly, especially for smaller centers particularly relevant for countries (the United Kingdom, Denmark) which are seeking to expand their ICU infrastructures to meet future demand for critical care services The organization of critical care in certain developing world countries : optimal resource structuring and allocation for sustainable critical care delivery
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Other reasons that a hospital might want to create subspecialty ICUs independent of mortality specialization might affect costs and resource utilization in ways unrelated to length of stay, Issues of convenience, control duration of mechanical ventilation, cost, family satisfaction to facilitate or enhance the education of residents and other hospital staff and to train critical care specialists
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Admission to a non-ideal specialty ICU (when patients need to board in other ICUs or if a hospital has a limited number of specialty ICUs) significantly higher adjusted mortality disco-ordination of care Efforts to minimize admission to non-ideal ICUs improved ICU survival
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Limitations 1.ICU level organizational factors(intensivist physician staffing, multidisciplinary care, nurse-to-patient ratios, critical care training program status or the availability of various residents) factors of decreased mortality more common in specialty ICUs 2. In-hospital mortality (rather than 28-day mortality) less sensitive to variation in discharge practices between hospitals 3. not evaluate other patient-centered outcomes(functional status, quality of life) 4. our six diagnostic categories significant diagnostic heterogeneity
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Ideal specialty ICU care appears to offer no survival benefit over general ICU care for select common diagnoses Non-ideal specialty ICU care is associated with increased risk-adjusted mortality
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