Introducing Critical Care Outreach: a ward-randomised trial of phased introduction in a general hospital
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 27 April 2004
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Springer Nature in Intensive Care Medicine
- Vol. 30 (7) , 1398-1404
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-004-2268-7
Abstract
The purpose of the study was to investigate the effects of introducing a critical care outreach service on in-hospital mortality and length of stay in a general acute hospital. A pragmatic ward-randomised trial design was used, with intervention introduced to all wards in sequence. No blinding was possible. Sixteen adult wards in an 800-bed general hospital in the north of England. All admissions to the 16 surgical, medical and elderly care wards during 32-week study period were included (7450 patients in total, of whom 2903 were eligible for the primary comparison). Essential elements of the Critical Care Outreach service introduced during the study were a nurse-led team of nurses and doctors experienced in critical care, a 24-h service, emphasis on education, support and practical help for ward staff. The main outcome measures were in-hospital mortality and length of stay. Outreach intervention reduced in-hospital mortality compared with control (two-level odds ratio: 0.52 (95% CI 0.32–0.85). A possible increased length of stay associated with outreach was not fully supported by confirmatory and sensitivity analyses. The study suggests outreach reduces mortality in general hospital wards. It may also increase length of stay, but our findings on this are equivocal.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Impact of an Outreach team on re‐admissions to a critical care unitAnaesthesia, 2003
- Editorial II: Outreach critical care--cash for no questions?British Journal of Anaesthesia, 2003
- The patient‐at‐risk team: identifying and managing seriously ill ward patientsAnaesthesia, 1999
- Physiological values and procedures in the 24 h before ICU admission from the wardAnaesthesia, 1999
- The Medical Emergency Team (MET): a model for the district general hospitalAustralian and New Zealand Journal of Medicine, 1998
- Simplified Acute Physiology Score II for measuring severity of illness in intermediate care unitsCritical Care Medicine, 1998
- Can some in-hospital cardio-respiratory arrests be prevented? A prospective surveyResuscitation, 1998
- A new Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS II) based on a European/North American multicenter studyJAMA, 1993
- Pre-arrest morbidity and other correlates of survival after in-hospital cardiopulmonary arrestThe American Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Medical patients at high risk for catastrophic deteriorationCritical Care Medicine, 1987