Cooke Colin R
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Michigan, United States of America.
Center for Healthcare Outcomes & Policy, Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Nov 29;11(11):e0166933. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0166933. eCollection 2016.
The extent to which geographic variability in ICU admission across the United States is driven by patients with lower risk of death is unknown.
To determine whether patients at low to moderate risk of death contribute to geographic variation in ICU admission.
Retrospective cohort of hospitalizations among Medicare beneficiaries (age > 64 years) admitted for ten common medical and surgical diagnoses (2004 to 2009). We examined population-adjusted rates of ICU admission per 100 hospitalizations in 304 health referral regions (HRR), and estimated the relative risk of ICU admission across strata of regional ICU and risk of death, adjusted for patient and regional characteristics.
ICU admission rates varied nearly two-fold across HRR quartiles (quartile 1 to 4: 13.6, 17.3, 20.0, and 25.2 per 100 hospitalizations, respectively). Observed mortality for patients in regions (quartile 4) with the greatest ICU use was 17% compared to 21% in regions with lowest ICU use (quartile 1) (p<0.001). After adjusting for patient and regional characteristics, including regional differences in ICU, skilled nursing, and long-term acute care bed capacity, individuals' risk of death modified the relationship between regional ICU use and an individual's risk of ICU admission (p for interaction<0.001). Region was least important in predicting ICU admission among patients with high (quartile 4) risk of death (RR 1.27, 95% CI 1.22-1.31, for high versus low ICU use regions), and most important for patients with moderate (quartile 2; RR 1.63, 95% CI 1.53-1.72, quartile 3; RR 1.56 95% CI 1.47-1.65) and low (quartile 1) risk of death (RR 1.50, 95% CI 1.41-1.59).
There is wide variation in in ICU use by geography, independent of ICU beds and physician supply, for patients with low and moderate risks of death.
美国重症监护病房(ICU)收治情况的地域差异在多大程度上是由死亡风险较低的患者所驱动尚不清楚。
确定低至中度死亡风险的患者是否导致了ICU收治的地域差异。
对医疗保险受益人(年龄>64岁)因十种常见内科和外科诊断而住院的情况进行回顾性队列研究(2004年至2009年)。我们检查了304个健康转诊区域(HRR)中每100例住院患者的人口调整后的ICU收治率,并估计了跨区域ICU分层和死亡风险的ICU收治相对风险,并对患者和区域特征进行了调整。
HRR四分位数间的ICU收治率相差近两倍(四分位数1至4:每100例住院患者分别为13.6、17.3、20.0和25.2)。ICU使用率最高的区域(四分位数4)患者的观察到的死亡率为17%,而ICU使用率最低的区域(四分位数1)为21%(p<0.001)。在对患者和区域特征进行调整后,包括ICU、专业护理和长期急性护理床位容量的区域差异,个体的死亡风险改变了区域ICU使用率与个体ICU收治风险之间的关系(交互作用p<0.001)。区域在预测高死亡风险(四分位数4)患者的ICU收治方面最不重要(高ICU使用率区域与低ICU使用率区域相比,RR为1.27,95%CI为1.22 - 1.31),而对中度(四分位数2;RR为1.63,95%CI为1.53 - 1.72,四分位数3;RR为1.56,95%CI为1.47 - 1.65)和低(四分位数))死亡风险患者最重要(RR为1.50,95%CI为1.41 - 1.59)。
对于低和中度死亡风险的患者,ICU使用情况存在广泛的地域差异,与ICU床位和医生供应无关。