Fresenko Lindsey E, Rutherfurd Charlotte, Robinson Lauren E, Robinson Cayla M, Montgomery-Yates Ashley A, Hogg-Graham Rachel, Morris Peter E, Eaton Tammy L, McPeake Joanne M, Mayer Kirby P
College of Health Sciences, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
College of Health and Human Services, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH.
Crit Care Explor. 2024 Dec 12;6(12):e1184. doi: 10.1097/CCE.0000000000001184. eCollection 2024 Dec 1.
Patients who survive critical illness navigate arduous and disparate recovery pathways that include referrals and participation in community-based rehabilitation services. Examining rehabilitation pathways during recovery is crucial to understanding the relationship on patient-centered outcomes. Furthermore, an understanding of social determinants of health (SDOH) in relation to outcomes and rehabilitation use will help ensure equitable access for future care. Therefore, there is a need to define and understand patient care pathways, specifically rehabilitation after discharge, through a SDOH lens after surviving a critical illness to improve long-term outcomes.
MEDLINE, PubMed, Web of Science Core Collection (Clarivate), the CINAHL, and the Physiotherapy Evidence Database.
A systematic review of the literature was completed examining literature from inception to March 2024. Articles were included if post-hospital rehabilitation utilization was reported in adult patients who survived critical illness. Discharge disposition was examined as a proxy for rehabilitation pathways. Patients were grouped by patient diagnosis for grouped analysis and reporting of data. Two independent researchers reviewed manuscripts for inclusion and data were extracted by one reviewer using Covidence. Both reviewers used the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale to assess risk of bias.
Of 72 articles included, only four articles reported detailed rehabilitation utilization. The majority of the studies included were cohort studies (91.7%) with most articles using a retrospective design (56.9%). The most common patient population was acute respiratory diagnoses (51.4%). Most patients were discharged directly home from the hospital (75.4%). Race/ethnicity was the most frequently reported SDOH (43.1%) followed by insurance status (13.9%) and education (13.9%).
The small number of articles describing rehabilitative utilization allows for limited understanding of rehabilitation pathways following critical illness. The reporting of detailed rehabilitation utilization and SDOH are limited in the literature but may play a vital role in the recovery and outcomes of survivors of critical illness.
危重症幸存者面临着艰难且各异的康复途径,其中包括转诊以及参与社区康复服务。在康复过程中审视康复途径对于理解以患者为中心的结局之间的关系至关重要。此外,了解与结局及康复利用相关的健康社会决定因素(SDOH)将有助于确保未来医疗服务的公平可及性。因此,有必要通过危重症幸存后的SDOH视角来界定和理解患者护理途径,尤其是出院后的康复,以改善长期结局。
MEDLINE、PubMed、科睿唯安的科学引文索引核心合集、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)以及物理治疗证据数据库。
完成了一项文献系统综述,检索了从起始至2024年3月的文献。如果报告了危重症成年幸存者的院后康复利用情况,则纳入相关文章。将出院处置情况作为康复途径的替代指标进行考察。按患者诊断对患者进行分组,以便进行分组分析和数据报告。两名独立研究人员对纳入的手稿进行评审,由一名评审人员使用Covidence提取数据。两名评审人员均使用纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表评估偏倚风险。
在纳入的72篇文章中,只有4篇文章报告了详细的康复利用情况。纳入的大多数研究为队列研究(91.7%),大多数文章采用回顾性设计(56.9%)。最常见的患者群体是急性呼吸道疾病诊断患者(51.4%)。大多数患者从医院直接出院回家(75.4%)。种族/族裔是最常报告的SDOH(43.1%),其次是保险状况(13.9%)和教育程度(13.9%)。
描述康复利用情况的文章数量较少,这使得对危重症后康复途径的了解有限。文献中详细康复利用情况和SDOH的报告有限,但可能在危重症幸存者的康复和结局中发挥至关重要的作用。