Prospective controlled trial of effect of medical emergency team on postoperative morbidity and mortality rates
To determine whether the introduction of an intensive care unit-based medical emergency team, responding to hospital-wide preset criteria of physiologic instability, would decrease the rate of predefined adverse outcomes in patients having major surgery. Prospective, controlled before-and-after tria...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Critical care medicine 2004-04, Vol.32 (4), p.916-921 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | To determine whether the introduction of an intensive care unit-based medical emergency team, responding to hospital-wide preset criteria of physiologic instability, would decrease the rate of predefined adverse outcomes in patients having major surgery.
Prospective, controlled before-and-after trial.
University-affiliated hospital.
Consecutive patients admitted to hospital for major surgery during a 4-month control phase and during a 4-month intervention phase.
Introduction of a hospital-wide intensive care unit-based medical emergency team to evaluate and treat in-patients deemed at risk of developing an adverse outcome by nursing, paramedical, and/or medical staff.
We measured incidence of serious adverse events, mortality after major surgery, and mean duration of hospital stay. There were 1,369 operations in 1,116 patients during the control period and 1,313 in 1,067 patients during the medical emergency team intervention period. In the control period, there were 336 adverse outcomes in 190 patients (301 outcomes/1,000 surgical admissions), which decreased to 136 in 105 patients (127 outcomes/1,000 surgical admissions) during the intervention period (relative risk reduction, 57.8%; p |
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ISSN: | 0090-3493 1530-0293 |
DOI: | 10.1097/01.CCM.0000119428.02968.9E |