Mason Christopher K, Adie Sara K, Shea Michael J, Konerman Matthew C, Thomas Michael P, McSparron Jakob I, Iwashyna Theodore J, Prescott Hallie C, Thompson Andrea D
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States of America.
Department of Pharmacy Service, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States of America.
Am Heart J Plus. 2024 Feb;38. doi: 10.1016/j.ahjo.2024.100363. Epub 2024 Jan 15.
Patients who survive critical illness endure complex physical and mental health conditions, referred to as post-intensive care syndrome (PICS). The University of Michigan's post-intensive cardiac care outpatient long-term outreach (PICCOLO) clinic is designed for patients recently admitted to the coronary care unit (CCU). The long-term goal of this clinic is to understand post-CCU patients' needs and design targeted interventions to reduce their morbidity and mortality post-discharge. As a first step toward this goal, we aimed to define the post-discharge needs of CCU survivors.
We retrospectively reviewed case-mix data (including rates of depression, PTSD, disability, and cognitive abnormalities) and health outcomes for patients referred to the PICCOLO clinic from July 1, 2018, through June 30, 2021 at Michigan Medicine.
Of the 134 referred patients meeting inclusion criteria, 74 (55 %) patients were seen in the PICCOLO clinic within 30 days of discharge. Patients seen in the clinic frequently screened positive for depression (PHQ-2 score ≥3, 21.4 %) and cognitive impairment (MOCA 26, 38.8 %). Further, patients also reported high rates of physical difficulty (mean WHODAS 2.0 score 28.4 %, consistent with moderate physical difficulty). Consistent with medical intensive care unit (ICU) patients, CCU survivors experience PICS.
This work highlights the feasibility of an outpatient care model and the need to leverage information gathered from this care model to develop treatment strategies and pathways to address symptoms of PICS in CCU survivors, including depression, cognitive impairment, and physical disability.
危重病幸存者会面临复杂的身心健康问题,即所谓的重症监护后综合征(PICS)。密歇根大学的重症心脏监护门诊长期外展(PICCOLO)诊所专为近期入住冠心病监护病房(CCU)的患者设立。该诊所的长期目标是了解CCU后患者的需求,并设计有针对性的干预措施以降低他们出院后的发病率和死亡率。作为朝着这一目标迈出的第一步,我们旨在确定CCU幸存者出院后的需求。
设计、地点、参与者:我们回顾性审查了2018年7月1日至2021年6月30日在密歇根医学中心被转诊至PICCOLO诊所的患者的病例组合数据(包括抑郁症、创伤后应激障碍、残疾和认知异常的发生率)及健康结局。
在134名符合纳入标准的转诊患者中,74名(55%)患者在出院后30天内到PICCOLO诊所就诊。在诊所就诊的患者经常筛查出抑郁症呈阳性(PHQ-2评分≥3,21.4%)和认知障碍(蒙特利尔认知评估量表评分<26,38.8%)。此外,患者还报告身体困难发生率很高(世界卫生组织残疾评定量表2.0平均评分28.4%,与中度身体困难相符)。与医学重症监护病房(ICU)患者一样,CCU幸存者也会经历PICS。
这项工作突出了门诊护理模式的可行性,以及利用从该护理模式收集的信息来制定治疗策略和途径以解决CCU幸存者中PICS症状(包括抑郁症、认知障碍和身体残疾)的必要性。