Eaton Ellen F, Westfall Andrew O, McClesky Brandi, Paddock Cayce S, Lane Peter S, Cropsey Karen L, Lee Rachael A
Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
Department of Biostatistics, Ryals School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
Open Forum Infect Dis. 2020 Mar 3;7(3):ofaa074. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofaa074. eCollection 2020 Mar.
Hospitalized persons who inject drugs are at a greater risk of adverse hospital outcomes including discharge against medical advice, inpatient illicit drug use, overdose, and death. However, there are limited data on the frequency and outcomes of these events in the United States.
This retrospective analysis included patients with injection-related infections receiving a protocol for injection drug use (IDU) at University of Alabama at Birmingham Hospital from 2016 to 2017. In-hospital IDU was suspected or reported drug usage plus confirmatory drug screen, and documented discharges "against medical advice" were deemed patient-directed discharges (PDD). We analyzed the frequency of and associations between in-hospital IDU, PDD, 30-day readmission, and deaths (between 2016 and 2019) using McNemar's tests. Logistic regression models evaluated the association between PDD, in-hospital IDU, readmission, and death.
Overall, 83 patients met inclusion criteria: 28 (34%) with in-hospital IDU, 12 (14%) PDD, 9 (11%) died, and 12 (14%) 30-day readmission. In-hospital IDU was significantly associated with PDD ( = .003), 30-day readmission ( = .005), and death ( = .0003). Patient-directed discharges and 30-day readmission were not significantly associated with death nor with each other.
In a cohort of patients receiving inpatient care for injection-related infections, illicit drug use, PDD, 30-day readmissions, and death were common. Furthermore, patients who use illicit drugs while hospitalized are significantly more likely to leave early, be readmitted, and/or die. We must design models of care that prevent adverse outcomes, including drug use and PDD, to reduce barriers to evidence-based treatment of infections.
住院的注射吸毒者出现不良住院结局的风险更高,包括违反医嘱出院、住院期间使用非法药物、过量用药和死亡。然而,在美国,关于这些事件的发生频率和结局的数据有限。
这项回顾性分析纳入了2016年至2017年在阿拉巴马大学伯明翰医院接受注射吸毒(IDU)方案治疗的与注射相关感染患者。医院内的IDU是指疑似或报告的药物使用情况加上确认性药物筛查,记录在案的“违反医嘱”出院被视为患者自主出院(PDD)。我们使用麦克尼马尔检验分析了2016年至2019年间医院内IDU、PDD、30天再入院率和死亡率之间的发生频率及关联。逻辑回归模型评估了PDD、医院内IDU、再入院率和死亡率之间的关联。
总体而言,83名患者符合纳入标准:28名(34%)有医院内IDU,12名(14%)PDD,9名(11%)死亡,12名(14%)30天再入院。医院内IDU与PDD(P = 0.003)、30天再入院率(P = 0.005)和死亡(P = 0.0003)显著相关。患者自主出院和30天再入院率与死亡之间以及彼此之间均无显著关联。
在一组因与注射相关感染而接受住院治疗的患者中,非法药物使用、PDD、30天再入院和死亡情况很常见。此外,住院期间使用非法药物的患者提前出院、再次入院和/或死亡的可能性显著更高。我们必须设计能够预防不良结局(包括药物使用和PDD)的护理模式,以减少感染循证治疗的障碍。