Assessment of need for lower level acuity critical care services at a tertiary acute care hospital in Canada: A prospective cohort study

Critical care beds are commonly described in three levels (highest level 3, lowest level 1). We aimed to describe the actual level of care for patients assigned to level 2 in a tertiary hospital with inadequate level 1 bed capacity. Prospective cohort study with daily assessment of level of care. Th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of critical care 2019-10, Vol.53, p.91-97
Hauptverfasser: Haun de Oliveira, Olivia, Pinto, Ruxandra, DasGupta, Tracey, Sirtartchouck, Leda, Rashleigh, Laura, Cross, Nicole, Srikandarajah, Aruchana, Sukumaran, Jaya, Wunsch, Hannah, Cuthbertson, Brian H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Critical care beds are commonly described in three levels (highest level 3, lowest level 1). We aimed to describe the actual level of care for patients assigned to level 2 in a tertiary hospital with inadequate level 1 bed capacity. Prospective cohort study with daily assessment of level of care. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients who could be triaged to level 1 for the entirety of their ICU stay. Secondary outcomes included the percentage of patients who could receive level 1 care on any given day. 289 patients originally classified as level 2 were assessed for the primary, and 335 for the secondary outcomes. 14.9% could be level 1 for their entire ICU stay. 20.6%, once appropriate for level 1, remained in that level for the rest of their ICU stay. 23.6% of the assessments were suitable for level 1 on any given day. In a single centre, 14.9% of level 2 patients could have been cared for in a lower acuity bed for the entirety of their ICU stay. We believe this methodology is reproducible and can help resource allocation with regard to the high demand for critical care beds. •Many patients can stay in a low acuity bed for the entirety of their ICU admission•One quarter of ICU patients require fewer resources than their bed acuity provides•Creating low acuity beds may help dealing with the high demand for critical care
ISSN:0883-9441
1557-8615
DOI:10.1016/j.jcrc.2019.06.004