by Vollam, Sarah; Gustafson, Owen; Morgan, Lauren; Pattison,
Natalie; Thomas, Hilary; Watkinson, Peter
Critical Care Medicine: July 2022 -
Volume 50 - Issue 7 - p 1083-1092
OBJECTIVES: Out-of-hours discharge from ICU to the ward is
associated with increased in-hospital mortality and ICU readmission. Little is
known about why this occurs. We map the discharge process and describe the
consequences of out-of-hours discharge to inform practice changes to reduce the
impact of discharge at night.
DESIGN: This study
was part of the REcovery FoLlowing intensive CarE Treatment mixed methods
study. We defined out-of-hours discharge as 16:00 to 07:59 hours. We undertook
20 in-depth case record reviews where in-hospital death after ICU discharge had
been judged “probably avoidable” in previous retrospective structured judgment
reviews, and 20 where patients survived. We conducted semistructured interviews
with 55 patients, family members, and staff with experience of ICU discharge
processes. These, along with a stakeholder focus group, informed ICU discharge
process mapping using the human factors–based functional analysis resonance
method.
SETTING: Three U.K. National Health Service hospitals,
chosen to represent different hospital settings.
SUBJECTS: Patients discharged from ICU, their families, and
staff involved in their care. INTERVENTIONS: None.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Out-of-hours discharge was
common. Patients and staff described out-of-hours discharge as unsafe due to a
reduction in staffing and skill mix at night. Patients discharged out-of-hours
were commonly discharged prematurely, had inadequate handover, were
physiologically unstable, and did not have deterioration recognized or
escalated appropriately. We identified five interdependent function keys to
facilitating timely ICU discharge: multidisciplinary team decision for
discharge, patient prepared for discharge, bed meeting, bed manager allocation
of beds, and ward bed made available.
CONCLUSIONS: We identified significant limitations in
out-of-hours care provision following overnight discharge from ICU. Transfer to
the ward before 16:00 should be facilitated where possible. Our work highlights
changes to help make day time discharge more likely. Where discharge after
16:00 is unavoidable, support systems should be implemented to ensure the
safety of patients discharged from ICU at night.
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