Comparison of medical admissions to intensive care units in the United States and United Kingdom.

Link to article at PubMed

Comparison of medical admissions to intensive care units in the United States and United Kingdom.

Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2011 Mar 25;

Authors: Wunsch H, Angus DC, Harrison DA, Linde-Zwirble WT, Rowan KM

RATIONALE: The US has seven times as many intensive care unit (ICU) beds per capita as the UK; the effect on care of critically ill patients is unknown. OBJECTIVE: Compare medical ICU admission in the US and UK. METHODS: Retrospective (2002-2004) cohort study of 172,785 admissions (137 US ICUs, Project IMPACT database; 160 UK ICUs, UK Case Mix Programme), with patients followed until initial hospital discharge. RESULTS: UK (vs US) admissions were less likely to be admitted directly from the emergency room (ER), (33.4 vs 58.0%), had longer hospital stays before ICU admission (mean days 2.6±8.2 vs 1.0±3.6), and fewer were ?85 years (3.2% vs 7.8%). UK patients were more frequently mechanically ventilated within 24h after ICU admission (68.0% vs 27.4%), were sicker (mean Acute Physiology Score 16.7±7.6 vs 10.6±6.8), and had higher primary hospital mortality (38.0% vs 15.9%; adjusted Odds Ratio (OR) 1.73, 95%CI 1.50-1.99). There was no mortality difference for mechanically ventilated patients admitted from the ER (adjusted OR 1.09, 0.89-1.33). Comparisons of hospital mortality were confounded by differences in casemix, hospital length of stay (UK median 10 days (IQR 3-24) vs US 6 (3-11)), and discharge practices: more US patients were discharged to skilled care facilities (29.0% of survivors vs 6.0% in the UK). CONCLUSIONS: Lower UK ICU bed availability is associated with fewer direct admissions from the ER, longer hospital stays before ICU admission, and higher severity of illness. Interpretation of between-country hospital outcomes is confounded by differences in casemix, processes of care and discharge practices.

PMID: 21471089 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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