Critical care admission following elective surgery was not associated with survival benefit: prospective analysis of data from 27 countries
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2017
Abstract:
Purpose: As global initiatives increase patient access to surgical treatments, there is a need to define optimal levels of perioperative care. Our aim was to describe the relationship between the provision and use of critical care resources and postoperative mortality. Methods: Planned analysis of data collected during an international 7-day cohort study of adults undergoing elective in-patient surgery. We used risk-adjusted mixed-effects logistic regression models to evaluate the association between admission to critical care immediately after surgery and in-hospital mortality. We evaluated hospital-level associations between mortality and critical care admission immediately after surgery, critical care admission to treat life-threatening complications, and hospital provision of critical care beds. We evaluated the effect of national income using interaction tests. Results: 44,814 patients from 474 hospitals in 27 countries were available for analysis. Death was more frequent amongst patients admitted directly to critical care after surgery (critical care: 103/4317 patients [2%], standard ward: 99/39,566 patients [0.3%]; adjusted OR 3.01 [2.10â5.21]; pÂ
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Kahan, Bc; Koulenti, D; Arvaniti, K; Beavis, V; Campbell, D; Chan, M; Moreno, R; Pearse RM (International Surgical Outcomes Study (ISOS), group); Zangrillo, A; Landoni, G; Beretta, L.
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