Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
Department of Emergency Medicine, George Washington University, Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Jun 13;14(6):e0218141. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0218141. eCollection 2019.
Critical illness affects health systems globally, but low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) bear a disproportionate burden. Due to a paucity of data, the capacity to care for critically ill patients in LMICs is largely unknown. Haiti has the lowest health indices in the Western Hemisphere. In this study, we report results of the first known nationwide survey of critical care capacity in Haiti.
Nationwide, cross-sectional survey of Haitian hospitals in 2017-2018.
Haiti.
All Haitian health facilities with at least six hospital beds.
Electronic- and paper-based survey.
Of 51 health facilities identified, 39 (76.5%) from all ten Haitian administrative departments completed the survey, reporting 124 reported ICU beds nationally. Of facilities without an ICU, 20 (83.3%) care for critically ill patients in the emergency department. There is capacity to ventilate 62 patients nationally within ICUs and six patients outside of the ICU. One-third of facilities with ICUs report formal critical care training for their physicians. Only five facilities met criteria for a Level 1 ICU as defined by the World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine. Self-identified barriers to providing more effective critical care services include lack of physical space for critically ill patients, lack of equipment, and few formally trained physicians and nurses.
Despite a high demand for critical care services in Haiti, current capacity remains insufficient to meet need. A significant amount of critical care in Haiti is provided outside of the ICU, highlighting the important overlap between emergency and critical care medicine in LMICs. Many ICUs in Haiti lack basic components for critical care delivery. Streamlining critical care services through protocol development, education, and training may improve important clinical outcomes.
危重病影响着全球的卫生系统,但中低收入国家(LMICs)承受着不成比例的负担。由于数据匮乏,LMICs 中危重病患者的护理能力在很大程度上是未知的。海地是西半球健康指数最低的国家。在这项研究中,我们报告了海地首例全国范围内危重病护理能力调查的结果。
2017-2018 年对海地医院进行的全国性横断面调查。
海地。
所有拥有至少 6 张病床的海地卫生机构。
电子和纸质调查。
在确定的 51 个卫生机构中,来自海地所有 10 个行政区的 39 个(76.5%)机构完成了调查,报告了全国 124 张 ICU 床位。在没有 ICU 的机构中,20 个(83.3%)在急诊室照顾危重病患者。全国 ICU 可容纳 62 名患者,非 ICU 可容纳 6 名患者。有 ICU 的机构中有三分之一报告其医生接受了正规的重症监护培训。仅有 5 家机构符合世界危重病医学会定义的 1 级 ICU 标准。自我确定的提供更有效危重病护理服务的障碍包括危重病患者缺乏物理空间、缺乏设备以及正式培训的医生和护士人数较少。
尽管海地对危重病护理服务的需求很高,但目前的能力仍然不足以满足需求。海地大量的危重病护理是在 ICU 之外提供的,这突出了在 LMICs 中急诊和危重病医学之间的重要重叠。海地的许多 ICU 缺乏提供危重病护理的基本组成部分。通过制定方案、教育和培训来简化危重病护理服务可能会改善重要的临床结局。