Intensive Care Unit Patient Follow-up
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of internal medicine (1960)
- Vol. 149 (1) , 68-72
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.1989.00390010086009
Abstract
• Six months after hospital discharge, we followed up 1545 patients who had received care in the general medical-surgical intensive care unit (ICU) of a tertiary care hospital. Vital status could not be ascertained for 200 of these patients. Of the 1345 former ICU patients for whom a determination of vital status could be made, 1261 (94%) were alive and 84 (6%) had died. Of those known to be living, 887 (70%) responded to a questionnaire regarding employment, functional, and social status. A large proportion of survivors less than 40 years of age had returned to work. Younger patients admitted to the hospital for elective surgery reported as much compromise of physical and psychological activity as did older patients admitted for emergency reasons. Older survivors reported an increase of interaction with family members and a decrease of social interaction with those other than family. (Arch Intern Med 1989;149:68-72)This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Is intensive care worth it?–An assessment of input and outcome for the critically illCritical Care Medicine, 1986
- Activity level and employment status after coronary bypass surgeryThe American Journal of Surgery, 1982
- Advances in the Measurement of Functional Status: Construction of Aggregate IndexesMedical Care, 1981
- Return to work and quality of life after surgery for coronary artery disease.BMJ, 1979
- Policies toward medical technology: the case of electronic fetal monitoring.American Journal of Public Health, 1979
- Survival of patients ventilated in an intensive therapy unit.BMJ, 1979