Appropriateness of admissions to intensive care unit

Joint Authors

al-Suleihat, Adnan
Holy, Muhammad
Smadi, Samir I.
al-Nabulusi, Basem A.

Source

Journal of the Royal Medical Services

Issue

Vol. 12, Issue 2 (31 Dec. 2005), pp.6-9, 4 p.

Publisher

The Royal Medical Services Jordan Armed Forces

Publication Date

2005-12-31

Country of Publication

Jordan

No. of Pages

4

Main Subjects

Medicine

Topics

Abstract EN

Objective: To improve resource utilization in the intensive care unit by assessing the appropriateness of admissions, exploring the reasons for improper selection of patients for intensive care and recommendations suggested to overcome them. Methods: This is a retrospective study conducted at Princess Haya Hospital (a secondary hospital with a total of 120 beds) in Aqaba-Jordan during the period November 1st, 1999 to December 1st, 2001.

All medical and surgical adult patients who were admitted to the intensive care unit were involved in the study.

The intensive care unit capacity is six beds that open and run mainly by a nursing staff, with no specific intensive care unit policy or protocols.

For each admission, patient demographics, diagnosis, cause of admission, length of stay in the intensive care unit and final outcome were collected.

Data collected were analyzed for each patient to examine the appropriateness of admission to the intensive care unit according to the criteria for intensive care unit admissions published by the American College of Critical Care Medicine. Results: There were 1169 admissions during the study period where 76% of admissions were medical patients and 53% had acute cardiovascular disorders.

Surgical patients constituted 24% of total intensive care unit admissions with 72% of these surgical patients were trauma cases. Only 54.2% of total admissions (medical and surgical patients) were admitted appropriately to intensive care unit.

The average length of stay was 2.3 days per patient.

Sixty five percent of patients were discharged to hospital wards.

About 15% of patients stayed less than 24 hours and a significant ratio 16.6% of admissions discharged home.

The mortality rate was 11%. Conclusion: Establishing guidelines for admission, discharge and triage of adult intensive care unit patients is of utmost importance and is supported by the literature.

Providing guidelines based on relevant literature and expert opinion will lay down the intensive care unit policy, procedures, and by laws.

Subsequently, appropriate utilization of intensive care unit resources will lead to optimizing health care cost.

American Psychological Association (APA)

al-Nabulusi, Basem A.& Holy, Muhammad& al-Suleihat, Adnan& Smadi, Samir I.. 2005. Appropriateness of admissions to intensive care unit. Journal of the Royal Medical Services،Vol. 12, no. 2, pp.6-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-107463

Modern Language Association (MLA)

al-Nabulusi, Basem A.…[et al.]. Appropriateness of admissions to intensive care unit. Journal of the Royal Medical Services Vol. 12, no. 2 (Dec. 2005), pp.6-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-107463

American Medical Association (AMA)

al-Nabulusi, Basem A.& Holy, Muhammad& al-Suleihat, Adnan& Smadi, Samir I.. Appropriateness of admissions to intensive care unit. Journal of the Royal Medical Services. 2005. Vol. 12, no. 2, pp.6-9.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-107463

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 9

Record ID

BIM-107463