ICU Admission Discharge Triage Guidelines

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Special Article

ICU Admission, Discharge, and Triage Guidelines:


A Framework to Enhance Clinical Operations,
Development of Institutional Policies, and Further
Research
Joseph L. Nates, MD, MBA, FCCM (Chair)1; Mark Nunnally, MD, FCCM2;
Ruth Kleinpell, PhD, RN, FAAN, FCCM3; Sandralee Blosser, MD, FCCP, FCCM4;
Jonathan Goldner, DO, FCCP, FCCM5; Barbara Birriel, MSN, CRNP, ACNP-BC, FCCM6;
Clara S. Fowler, MS7; Diane Byrum, RN, MSN, CCRN, CCNS, FCCM8;
William Scherer Miles, MD, FACS, FCCM9; Heatherlee Bailey, MD, FAAEM, FCCM10;
Charles L. Sprung, MD, JD, MCCM11

Division of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, Department of


Critical Care, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center,
Houston, TX.
2
Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, The University of Chicago,
Chicago, IL.
3
Center for Clinical Research and Scholarship, Rush University Medical
Center, Rush University College of Nursing, Chicago, IL.
4
Penn State Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, PA.
5
Pocono Health System, East Stroudsburg, PA.
6
College of Nursing, The Pennsylvania State University College of
Nursing, Hershey, PA.
7
Research Medical Library, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer
Center, Houston, TX.
8
PH Huntersville, Nursing Education, Practice and Research, Novant
Health Huntersville Medical Center, Huntersville, NC.
9
Department of Surgery, UNC-Chapel Hill, Carolinas Medical Center,
Charlotte, NC.
10
Department of Emergency Medicine, Durham VA Medical Center,

Durham, NC.
11
General Intensive Care Unit, Department of Anesthesiology and Critical
Care Medicine, Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem,
Israel.
Supplemental digital content is available for this article. Direct URL citations appear in the printed text and are provided in the HTML and PDF
versions of this article on the journals website (http://journals.lww.com/
ccmjournal).
The American College of Critical Care Medicine (ACCM), which honors individuals for their achievements and contributions to multidisciplinary critical care medicine, is the consultative body of the Society of
Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) that possesses recognized expertise in
the practice of critical care. The College has developed administrative
guidelines and clinical practice parameters for the critical care practitioner. New guidelines and practice parameters are continually developed,
and current ones are systematically reviewed and revised.
Copyright 2016 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine. All Rights
Reserved.
DOI: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000001856
1

Critical Care Medicine

Dr. Nates received research funding from The University of Texas Engineering Grant for simulation and from The University of Texas MD Anderson Grant for noninvasive ventilation. He disclosed participation in other
activities with the American Society of Anesthesiology (speaker) and
Colombian Society of Critical Care Medicine (speaker). Dr. Nunnally disclosed participation in other activities with the Society of Critical Care
Anesthesiologists (board), American Society of Anesthesiologists committee, Illinois Society of Anesthesiologists (delegate), International Anesthesia Research Society, and Association of University Anesthesiologists.
Dr. Kleinpell received research funding from the American Association of
Critical Care Nurses Impact Research Grant, participated in other activities with the Institute of Medicine of Chicago (board member), American
Academy of Nursing (board member), Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (board member), and American Board of Internal Medicine
Critical Care Medicine Board (board member). Dr.Blosser disclosed
participation in other activities with NCS (committee member). Dr. Byrum
received funding from the Moore Foundation grant for ICU Liberation
Society of Critical Care Medicine. Dr. Bailey disclosed other relationships
with NWS (Speaker for CME courses) and participation in other activities
with AAEM (chair of academic committee). Dr.Sprung disclosed relationships not related to this topic with Asahi Kasei Pharma America Corporation (consultant for Data Safety and Monitoring Committee), LeukoDx
Ltd. (Principal investigator, Research study on biomarkers of sepsis), LeukoDx Ltd. (International Sepsis Forum Board member), and Continuing
Education, Inc./University at Sea, Lecturer). The remaining authors have
disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest.
For information regarding this article, E-mail: [email protected]

Objectives: To update the Society of Critical Care Medicines


guidelines for ICU admission, discharge, and triage, providing a
framework for clinical practice, the development of institutional
policies, and further research.
Design: An appointed Task Force followed a standard, systematic, and evidence-based approach in reviewing the literature to
develop these guidelines.
Measurements and Main Results: The assessment of the evidence
and recommendations was based on the principles of the Grading
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Nates et al
of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation
system. The general subject was addressed in sections: admission
criteria and benefits of different levels of care, triage, discharge
timing and strategies, use of outreach programs to supplement
ICU care, quality assurance/improvement and metrics, nonbeneficial treatment in the ICU, and rationing considerations. The literature searches yielded 2,404 articles published from January 1998
to October 2013 for review. Following the appraisal of the literature, discussion, and consensus, recommendations were written.
Conclusion: Although these are administrative guidelines, the subjects addressed encompass complex ethical and medico-legal
aspects of patient care that affect daily clinical practice. A limited
amount of high-quality evidence made it difficult to answer all the
questions asked related to ICU admission, discharge, and triage.
Despite these limitations, the members of the Task Force believe
that these recommendations provide a comprehensive framework
to guide practitioners in making informed decisions during the
admission, discharge, and triage process as well as in resolving
issues of nonbeneficial treatment and rationing. We need to further develop preventive strategies to reduce the burden of critical
illness, educate our noncritical care colleagues about these interventions, and improve our outreach, developing early identification
and intervention systems. (Crit Care Med 2016; 44:15531602)
Key Words: administration; admission; critical care; critically ill;
discharge; futility; guideline; healthcare rationing; intensive care;
intensive care unit; metrics; nonbeneficial treatment; triage; utilization

ritical care resources are limited and expensive. The


appropriate utilization of ICU beds is essential, but it is
complex and a challenge to attain. In 2008, the cost of
critical care in the United States was estimated to range between
$121 and $263 billion (16.938.4% of hospital costs and 5.2
11.2% of national healthcare expenditures) (1). The increasing cost of delivering healthcare has become an unsustainable
burden accompanied by waste, overuse, care delays, and other
delivery inefficiencies.
In 1998, the Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection
and Quality in the Health Care Industry, created by President
William J. Clinton to evaluate and provide advice on the healthcare system, released a report asking for a national commitment
to improve the quality of healthcare (2). Consequently, the
Institute of Medicine released recommendations for improving
the 21st century American healthcare system, emphasizing the
delivery of safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient, and
equitable healthcare (3, 4). The institute proposed an urgent
overhaul of the healthcare system; it was considered imperative
that the management of our systems be improved. As time has
passed, the increasingly older and growing population, limited
workforce, increased complexity of care and severity of illness
of hospitalized patients, and other factors are adding to the
pressure to change clinical processes to improve patient care.
Preceding some of these reports, in 1999, the Society of
Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) published guidelines for ICU
admission, discharge, and triage (ADT) (5). Since that time,
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practitioners and administrators have considered these guidelines in formulating policies and establishing criteria for ICU
ADT in their institutions. In light of the significant healthcare legislative changes and changes in ICU technologies and
treatments that have occurred in the United States in the
15years since the original ADT guidelines were published, the
American College of Critical Care Medicine Board of Regents,
through the Guidelines Management Committee, appointed a
new Task Force to re-evaluate and update the guidelines.
The following recommendations are the result of the work
of the ADT Task Force. The recommendations are divided into
sections: admission criteria and benefits of different levels of
care, triage, discharge timing and strategies, use of outreach
programs to supplement ICU care, quality assurance/improvement and metrics, nonbeneficial treatment in the ICU, and
rationing considerations and systems.

METHODOLOGY
SCCM
The Society is the largest multidisciplinary nonprofit medical organization dedicated to improve critical care practice,
education, research, and advocacy. It embraces the delivery of
timely interventions. SCCMs mission is to secure the highest quality care for all critically ill and injured patients. At
the same time, SCCM envisions a world in which all critically ill and injured persons receive care from a present integrated team of dedicated trained intensivists and critical care
specialists.
Task Force
A group of nationally and internationally recognized clinical
experts, authors, and leaders in critical care medicine integrated the ADT Task Force. After a planning and group consolidation period, a teleconference was held to establish and
agree on the organizational and functional structure of the
Task Force, review the work of previous SCCM Task Forces,
and make decisions regarding the agenda, scope, timeline,
grading system, educational tools, and other potential support
needs. Additional meetings were scheduled as necessary. The
subsequent work of the group was conducted individually and
through web meetings, teleconferences, telephone discussions,
e-mails, and face-to-face meetings during the SCCM annual
congress.
Objectives
The objectives of this Task Force were 1) to update the SCCM
Guidelines for ICU ADT and 2) to provide a framework for
the development of institutional policies, further research, and
discussion for future refinement of these recommendations.
Topic Refinement
The population considered for these guidelines consisted of
adult critically ill patients who are candidates for critical care
services or admission to the ICU. Adults are considered to be
persons 18 years old and older. Critical care and critical illness
August 2016 Volume 44 Number 8

Special Article

are defined by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services


as follows: Critical care is defined as the direct delivery by
a physician(s) of medical care for a critically ill or critically
injured patient. A critical illness or injury acutely impairs one
or more vital organ systems such that there is a high probability of imminent or life-threatening deterioration in the
patients condition. (6)
Topic selection and organization were performed by the
Task Force chair (J.L.N.) and agreed upon by all guideline
authors. The broad sections for the guidelines addressed the
following interventions: ICU ADT, outreach programs, nonbeneficial care, rationing, and quality assurance and performance improvement. Individual section assignments were
based on author expertise and interest. Relevant questions
defined the coverage and recommendations for each section.
For example, the authors of the ICU discharge section considered whether patients discharged during the day have different
outcomes than patients discharged at night. All authors were
responsible for identifying areas in which further research is
needed.
Search and Review of the Literature
The Task Force chair, in consultation with the librarian
(C.S.F.), clarified the topics and identified specific questions
to be answered using the published literature. After group discussion and agreement, these questions served as a basis for
constructing comprehensive literature searches in selected
biomedical databases in order to identify relevant publications for each section of the guidelines. Using the 1999 ADT
Guidelines as a starting point, searches in MEDLINE (Ovid),
EMBASE (Ovid), and PubMed yielded 2,404 articles published
from January 1998 to October 2013. Additional searches using
Guidelines.gov, Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network,
Trip database, selected societies websites, and handsearching
yielded an additional 10 guideline documents and other articles that were considered by the authors. Detailed information
about the search strategies is presented in Appendix 1 (Supplemental Digital Content 1, http://links.lww.com/CCM/B900).
Each author received the set of citations and abstracts relevant to his or her section of the guidelines; references not
directly related to the content area were excluded from the
review. The full-text articles were retrieved, and the research
presented in the articles was appraised prior to the formulation
of the new recommendations.
Scoring of the Evidence
Authors were directed to use the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE)
system to appraise the literature and support their recommendations where applicable (79). In order to apply the GRADE
criteria, the group underwent additional training on the use of
GRADE through educational material provided by the librarian, a webinar led by a guideline co-author who had experience
using GRADE (M.N.), and e-mail communication for consultation. SCCM resources were available to the team throughout
the process.
Critical Care Medicine

The GRADE system explicitly separates the certainty of evidence from the strength of recommendation. It classifies evidence as high (grade A), moderate (B), low (C), or very low
(D) certainty for individual study outcomes. Randomized controlled trials are initially classified as high-certainty evidence and
observational studies as low-certainty evidence. Evidence can be
downgraded on the basis of five factors: study limitations resulting in a likelihood of bias, inconsistency of results, indirectness
of evidence, high likelihood of publication bias (publication of
selective results), and imprecision of results. Evidence can be
upgraded on the basis of three factors: a large effect size (10),
presence of a dose-response gradient, and plausible confounding biases that would tend to blunt or negate findings.
Formulation of Recommendations
Recommendations are classified as strong (grade 1) or weak
(grade 2) (11). Four considerations influenced assignment
of the strength of a recommendation: certainty of evidence,
assessment of the balance of risks and benefits, relevant values
and preferences, and burdens and costs of interventions. The
scores given for certainty of evidence and strength of recommendation reflect the groups degree of confidence in their
assessment. As an example, a strong recommendation based
on high-certainty evidence is indicated as a grade 1A recommendation (Table 1).
Making a recommendation entails interpreting data and
clinical culture through the lens of expertise. The Task Force
composed of the guidelines to respect the history of the document, clinical needs in the medical community, available evidence, and the demands imposed by these elements. Using
GRADE to arrive at the recommendations made as clear as possible the link between certainty of evidence and data. Specifics
regarding patients, interventions, comparisons, and outcomes
were essential to the linkage between the literature and the
recommendation. In many cases, recommendations were such
that the alternative was not plausible. In this case, the recommendation was left ungraded as a best-practice statement.
Using five factors (bias, heterogeneity, imprecision, indirectness, and publication bias) to downgrade evidence and
three factors (effect size, dose-response gradient, and plausible
blunting effects of biases) to upgrade evidence, Task Force
members assigned a score to the supporting data for confidence in the evidence. Strength of recommendation was based
on the confidence in the evidence, the balancing of positive
and negative effects, values and preferences, and burdens and
costs of interventions.
Each section author wrote and scored recommendations for
his or her assigned topic. If no recommendations were offered,
authors provided a statement to that effect. An initial completed draft was reviewed by all of the members of the Task
Force. Comments were addressed, and a revised draft was circulated among previous Task Forces members for comment
before the final draft submission and approval. Finally, the
members completed two rounds of Delphi surveys, and their
responses were scored using a Likert scale. The scaling ranged
from strongly disagree (score = 1) to strongly agree (score = 5).
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Table 1.

Scoring for Certainty of Evidence and Strength of Recommendation

Certainty of
Evidence

Implications for
future research

High (A)

Moderate (B)

New data unlikely


to change current
confidence in findings

Strength of
recommendation

Very Low (D)

New data very


likely to have an
important impact
on confidence

Strong (1)

Confidence in
Benefits definitively
recommendation
outweigh associated
costs and burdens
Meaning

New data likely to have


an important impact on
confidence

Low (C)

Current lack of confidence in


findings points to need for
research
Weak (2)

Benefits worth
associated costs and
burdens

To clinicians: most patients should get the intervention


To patients: most people would want the intervention
To policymakers: consider adopting the intervention
as policy

Uncertain balance of
benefits vs costs
and burdens

Costs and burdens might


outweigh benefits

To clinicians: help patients make informed


decisions about the intervention
To patients: many people would not want the
intervention
To policymakers: the interventions value is
debatable

Adapted from Andrews et al (11). Adaptations are themselves works protected by copyright. So in order to publish this adaptation, authorization must be
obtained both from the owner of the copyright in the original work and from the owner of copyright in the translation or adaptation.

A score of 4 or greater was considered general agreement.


Any differences after the second survey were decided by vote.
General agreement was reached for all final recommendations
and their grades.
Limitations and Strengths
Historically, administrative guidelines have not been developed
using evidence-based methodology, but rather using a nonsystematic expert-opinion approach; this approach was used
for the previous ADT recommendations (5). Even the most
recent SCCM guidelines continue to follow this approach, possibly because of the lack of traditional sources for evidence in
administrative fields (12). Some recent clinical guidelines, such
as the American Society of Anesthesiologists latest difficult
airway management and central venous access guidelines, were
supported by a methodical mixture of evidence and expert
opinion (13, 14). Despite the administrative nature of the ADT
guidelines, the Task Force decided to use a systematic approach
to review the literature and avoid an expert-opinion system
to generate recommendations. Recommendations were left
ungraded when there was no evidence to support a recommendation by the panel, the particular practice was considered
best practice, and/or the alternative statement did not make
sense. The panel sought to base recommendations on evidence
when it existed.
Target Audiences
The target audiences of these guidelines are the critical care professionals and administrators who make daily administrative
and clinical decisions in the ICU, government agencies, nongovernment organizations, and any other healthcare legislative
body evaluating the utilization of these resources. However,
some of these recommendations may be inadequate in regions
outside the United States. Major geographical, geopolitical,
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and economic differences in other parts of the world could


represent barriers for implementation or appropriateness.
Conflict of Interest
These administrative guidelines were formulated with no
direct industry interference at any level. We did not discuss
drugs, devices, software applications, or other industrial products during the development of this document. In the first
meeting, the members of the ADT Task Force indicated that
they have no significant financial or nonfinancial conflict of
interest with participation in this project. In addition, all the
members fulfilled the requirements of filling out and submitting the standard SCCM conflict of interest disclosure forms,
which were evaluated and cleared by the SCCM Guidelines
Management Committee for potential conflicts.
Guidelines Revision and Updates
Considering the complexity of a frequent review of this document and the potential lack of additional substantive evidence
that would merit the revision of the current body of work,
we do not foresee a full review of the guidelines in less than
3 years. However, the ADT Task Force has set a publication
monitoring process that will allow the early identification of
studies of enough significance to prompt an earlier update in
any of the recommendations. This update would be linked to
the electronic version of the article and would not require the
revision of the entire document.

SUMMARY STATEMENT
Table 2 summarizes the Task Forces recommendations. The
evidence and rationale for each recommendation, as well as
suggestions for future research, are described in the remaining
sections of this document.
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Table 2.

Summary of Evidence-Based Recommendations and Best Practices

Recommendations

Grade

ICU admission
We suggest that individual institutions and their ICU leaders develop policies to meet their specific
population needs (e.g., trauma, burns, and neurological), taking into consideration their institutional
limitations such as ICU size and therapeutic capabilities

Ungraded

To optimize resource use while improving outcomes, we suggest guiding ICU admissions on the basis
of a combination of

2D

Specific patient needs that can be only addressed in the ICU environment, such as life-supportive
therapies
Available clinical expertise
Prioritization according to the patients condition
Diagnosis
Bed availability
Objective parameters at the time of referral, such as respiratory rate
Potential for the patient to benefit from interventions
Prognosis
We suggest using the following tools for bed allocation during the admission and triage processes

Ungraded

Guide to resource allocation of intensive monitoring and care (Table 3)


ICU admission prioritization framework (Table 4)
We suggest patients needing life-sustaining interventions who have a higher probability of recovery
and would accept cardiopulmonary resuscitation receive a higher priority for ICU admission than
those with a significantly lower probability of recovery who choose not to receive cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (Table4)

2D

We suggest that patients with invasive mechanical ventilation or complex life-threatening conditions,
including those with sepsis, be treated in an ICU. Patients should not be weaned from mechanical
ventilation on the general ward unless the ward is a high-dependency/intermediate unit

2C

We suggest that critically ill patients in the emergency department or on the general ward be
transferred to a higher level of care, such as the ICU, in an expeditious manner

2D

We suggest avoiding admitting to a specialized ICU patients with a primary diagnosis not associated
with that specialty (i.e., boarding)

2C

We suggest the admission of neurocritically ill patients to a neuro-ICU, especially those with a
diagnosis of intracerebral hemorrhage or head injury

2C

We recommend a high-intensity ICU model, characterized by the intensivist being responsible for dayto-day management of the patient, either in a closed ICU setting (in which the intensivist serves as
the primary physician) or through a hospital protocol for mandatory intensivist consultation

1B

We do not recommend a 24-hr/7-d intensivist model if the ICU has a high-intensity staffing model
(vide supra) during the day or night

1A

We suggest optimizing ICU nursing resources and nursing ratios, taking into consideration available
nursing resources (e.g., levels of education, support personnel, specific workloads), patients needs,
and patients medical complexity

2D

Because of current constraints on the availability and cost of 24-hr intensivist coverage, further studies
are needed to address the efficacy of coverage with critical caretrained advance practice providers,
including nurse practitioners and physician assistants, and critical care telemedicine

Ungraded

We suggest that patients receive ICU treatment if their prognosis for recovery and quality of life is
acceptable regardless of their length of ICU stay. However, factors such as age, comorbidities,
prognosis, underlying diagnosis, and treatment modalities that can influence survival should be taken
into account

Ungraded

(Continued)

Critical Care Medicine

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Table 2.

(Continued). Summary of Evidence-Based Recommendations and Best Practices

Recommendations

Grade

ICU triage
We suggest that every ICU institute methods for prioritizing and triaging patients, with policies and
guidelines that are disclosed in advance

Ungraded

We suggest that triage decisions are made explicitly and without bias. Ethnic origin, race, sex, social
status, sexual preference, or financial status should never be considered in triage decisions

Ungraded

We suggest that, under ideal conditions, patients be admitted or discharged strictly on their potential to
benefit from ICU care

Ungraded

We suggest that some overtriage is more acceptable and preferable to undertriage

2D

We suggest minimizing the transfer time of critically ill patients from the emergency department to the
ICU (< 6hr in nontrauma patients)

2D

We suggest that, considering the frequent lack of rapid ICU bed availability, emergency medicine
practitioners be prepared to deliver critical care in the emergency department

Ungraded

In addition to optimization of the triage process from the emergency department to the ICU, we
suggest close monitoring and timely intervention for those who are triaged to the ward. These
interventions might reduce delayed transfers to the ICU of undertriaged patients and prevent acute
deterioration of those still requiring stabilization after hospital admission

2D

We suggest that patients with risk factors for postoperative instability or decompensation be closely
monitored and managed in a higher level of care unit than the ward in the immediate postoperative period

Ungraded

There are insufficient data to make a recommendation for or against ICU-to-ICU interhospital transfer

No recommendation

We suggest that all ICUs have designated additional equivalent beds, equipment, and staff necessary
to support the critically ill during a mass casualty incident emergency response

Ungraded

We suggest that a designated person or service, with control over resources and active involvement, be
responsible for making ICU triage decisions during normal or emergency conditions

Ungraded

We suggest basing the decision to admit an elderly (> 80 yr) patient to an ICU on the patients
comorbidities, severity of illness, prehospital functional status, and patient preferences with regard to
life-sustaining treatment, not on their chronological age

2C

We suggest that ICU access of cancer patients be decided on the basis established for all critical care
patients, with careful consideration of their long-term prognosis

Ungraded

We suggest that ICU care of all critically ill patients, in particular, cancer patients with advanced
disease, be reassessed and discussed with the patient, next of kin, legal representative, or power of
attorney at regular intervals

Ungraded

We suggest not using scoring systems alone to determine level of care or removal from higher levels
of care because these are not accurate in predicting individual mortality

2C

We suggest that all hospitals and regional areas develop a coordinated triage plan for epidemics. The
hospital plans should include both triage and dissemination of patients throughout the hospital

Ungraded

We suggest that during epidemics, nontraditional settings be considered and utilized for the care of
critically ill patients

Ungraded

We suggest not using routine laboratory studies alone in determining the nature of illness during an epidemic

Ungraded

We suggest that activation of the hospital disaster plan and a coordinated response of the entire healthcare
team (e.g., physicians, nursing staff, environmental staff, administrators) follow the announcement of
a mass casualty incident. The team should ensure that their institution and critical areas (emergency
department, operating room, and ICU) are ready for the rapid and efficient transition from normal to
emergency operations and increase their capacity to accommodate a larger volume of critically ill patients

Ungraded

We suggest that the disaster response teams identify all patients in need of ICU care and those
already hospitalized who could be discharged, and then triage and transfer the incoming patients to
the most appropriate setting as soon as possible

Ungraded

We suggest that in areas at risk, ICUs be prepared to deal with the victims of not only external disasters
but also internal disasters, including collapse of surrounding services in large-scale disasters such
as an earthquake, tsunami, or major tornado. Every ICU should have general disaster and evacuation
plans such as those required by the Joint Commission Standards in the United States

Ungraded

(Continued)

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Table 2.

(Continued). Summary of Evidence-Based Recommendations and Best Practices

Recommendations

Grade

ICU discharge
We suggest that every ICU stipulate specific discharge criteria in its ADT policy

Ungraded

We suggest that it is appropriate to discharge a patient from the ICU to a lower acuity area when a
patients physiologic status has stabilized and there no longer is a need for ICU monitoring and
treatment

Ungraded

We suggest that the discharge parameters be based on ICU admission criteria, the admitting criteria
for the next lower level of care, institutional availability of these resources, patient prognosis,
physiologic stability, and ongoing active interventions

Ungraded

We suggest that, to improve resource utilization, discharge from the ICU is appropriate despite a
deteriorated patients physiological status if active interventions are no longer planned

Ungraded

We suggest refraining from transferring patients to lower acuity care areas based solely on
severity-of-illness scores. General and specific severity-of-illness scoring systems can identify
patient populations at higher risk of clinical deterioration after ICU discharge. However,
their value for assessing the readiness for transfer of individual patients to lower acuity care has not
been evaluated

Ungraded

We suggest avoiding discharge from ICU after hours (night shift, after 7 pm in institutions with 12-hr
shifts). In addition, best practice would seek to optimize evening and night coverage and services

Grade 2C
Ungraded

We suggest discharging patients at high risk for mortality and readmission (high severity of illness,
multiple comorbidities, physiologic instability, ongoing organ support) to a step-down unit or longterm acute care hospital as opposed to the regular ward

Grade 2C

We suggest that a standardized process for discharge from the ICU be followed; both oral and written
formats for the report may reduce readmission rate

Ungraded

Outreach programs to supplement ICU care


We suggest that rapid response systems be utilized for early review of acutely ill non-ICU patients
to identify patients who need or would benefit from ICU admission and treatment and to prevent
unnecessary ICU admissions

2C

We suggest that ICU consult teams be considered for use to facilitate transition from the ICU, assist
ward staff in the management of deteriorating patients, facilitate transfer to ICU, and reduce rates of
readmission to critical care

2C

Quality assurance/improvement and metrics of ADT practices


We suggest following the SCCMs guidelines as described in critical care delivery in the ICU: defining
clinical roles and the best practice model (currently undergoing revision)

Ungraded

We suggest that every ICU have a written ADT policy, as an administrative best practice, to guide
appropriate patient placement

Ungraded

We suggest following the metrics identified as indicators of ADT performance in this


framework (Table5). This information should be collected electronically through the
electronic health record, if available

Ungraded

(Continued)

Critical Care Medicine

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Table 2.

(Continued). Summary of Evidence-Based Recommendations and Best Practices

Recommendations

Grade

Nonbeneficial treatment in the ICU


We suggest employing the term nonbeneficial treatment whenever clinicians consider further care
futile

Ungraded

We suggest avoiding the current quantitative definitions of nonbeneficial treatment because of the lack
of consensus on a single definition

Ungraded

We suggest against the routine use of the currently available severity-of-illness scores for identifying
nonbeneficial treatments in specific patients

2C

We suggest that the information provided by healthcare professionals be quantitative to reduce


disagreement between the prognostic information delivered to the patients surrogates and their
understanding and acceptance of the message

2C

We suggest developing clear ICU and institutional nonbeneficial treatment policies through consensus
of all the parties involved (physicians, nurses, administrators, lawyers, ethicists, and family
representatives)

Ungraded

We suggest that prudent clinical judgment, in conjunction with the latest American Heart Association
guidelines and specific local and hospital policies, be followed in deciding when to withhold or
terminate cardiopulmonary resuscitation

Ungraded

We suggest that life-supportive therapies be removed in cases of patients declared dead by


neurological criteria in accordance with local law (including potential legal restrictions associated
with the patients religious beliefs), hospital policies, and standard medical practice and after
appropriate organ donation considerations

Ungraded

We suggest the early involvement of ethicists (within 24hr of identifying potential or actual conflict) to
aid in conflicts associated with nonbeneficial treatment
Although palliative medicine consultations have been previously associated with reduction in critical
care resources, the most recent evidence does not support a recommendation, emphasizing the
need for additional high-quality research on this subject

2C
No recommendation

We suggest following the SCCM Ethics Committees 1997 general recommendations for determining
when treatments are nonbeneficial and for resolving end-of-life conflicts regarding withholding or
withdrawing life support. We also support the fair-process approach recommended by the American
Medical Associations Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs committee

Ungraded

There is growing concern that nonbeneficial treatment affects not only the individuals receiving these
treatments but also the rest of the population. Providing nonbeneficial treatments reduces the
availability of the same resources in more appropriate situations, treatments, or patients and could
cause unwanted and unrecognized harm. The effect of this practice has an unknown effect on
the healthcare system as a whole, leading to an urgent need to better understand the impact of
misallocation of critical care resources in the U.S. healthcare system

Ungraded

As a result of the major knowledge gaps identified, we suggest that more research be performed on all
aspects of the determination and provision of nonbeneficial ICU treatment

Ungraded

Rationing
We suggest adhering to the recommendations of the SCCM Ethics Committee, the Council on Ethical
and Judicial Affairs of the American Medical Association, and the Bioethics Task Force of the
American Thoracic Society for the ethical allocation of scarce medical resources until updated or
appropriate evidence-based operational frameworks become available

Ungraded

Further research is needed on all aspects of rationing critical care resources to narrow the current
gaps in allocating scarce resources

Ungraded

ADT = admission, discharge, and triage, SCCM = Society of Critical Care Medicine.

ICU ADMISSION
The ICU is an area within a medical facility equipped with
advanced technologies such as ventilators and personnel
trained to provide intensive, advanced life-supportive care to
critically ill patients. These units can be general or specialized and can be organized by specific systems, pathologies, or
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problems (e.g., neurological, burn, or trauma ICUs, and medical or surgical ICUs) or by age groups (e.g., adult or PICUs).
Given the scarce human and economic resources available to
support these units and the inappropriateness of delivering
therapies that are not medically indicated, whether knowingly
or not, the admission to these units is heavily guarded.
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Criteria for Admission to the ICU


Recommendations:

We suggest that individual institutions and their ICU leaders develop policies to meet their specific population needs
(e.g., trauma, burns, and neurological), taking into consideration their institutional limitations such as ICU size and
therapeutic capabilities (ungraded).
To optimize resource use while improving outcomes, we
suggest guiding ICU admissions on the basis of a combination of 1) specific patient needs that can be only addressed
in the ICU environment, such as life-supportive therapies,
2) available clinical expertise, 3) prioritization according
to the patients condition, 4) diagnosis, 5) bed availability,
6)objective parameters at the time of referral, such as respiratory rate, 7) potential for the patient to benefit from interventions, and 8) prognosis (grade 2D).
We suggest using the following tools for bed allocation during the admission and triage processes (ungraded):
Guide to resource allocation of intensive monitoring
and care including levels of monitoring, care, and nursing ratios (Table 3).
Prioritization framework (Table 4).
We suggest patients needing life-sustaining interventions
who have a higher probability of recovery and would accept
cardiopulmonary resuscitation receive a higher priority for
ICU admission than those with a significantly lower probability of recovery who choose not to receive cardiopulmonary resuscitation (Table4) (grade 2D).

Table 3.

Previous Guidelines and Current Status. In the previous guidelines (5), three models for guiding admission
were discussed: the prioritization model, the diagnosis
model, and the objective parameters model. In the prioritization model, patients are categorized by four priority levels based on how likely they are to benefit from admission
to the ICU. In the diagnosis model, a list of specific conditions and diseases is offered for deciding which patients
should be admitted to the ICU. In the objective parameters model, specific vital signs, laboratory values, imaging
or electrocardiogram findings, and physical findings are
offered for deciding which patients should be admitted. All
these models have limitations, and none have been properly
validated. Nevertheless, the need for objective criteria has
been outlined as a part of the Joint Commissions requirements; currently, the Joint Commission requires that hospitals have a written process for accepting and admitting
patients, including criteria to determine a patients eligibility for care, treatment, and services rendered. The commission does not specifically address admission criteria in its
latest publication (15).
Currently, there are no conclusive studies showing allencompassing, definitive criteria for ICU admissions. The
evidence gathered during the development of the current
guidelines highlights the lack of high-quality evidence supporting specific ICU admission criteria and demonstrating improved outcomes. Furthermore, our literature review
revealed the diversity and the range of methodological quality
of the studies investigating this subject.

Guide to Resource Allocation of Intensive Monitoring and Care

Level

Type of Patients

Nursing-to-Patient
Ratios

Interventions

ICU (very high) or level 3

Critically ill patients who need hourly


and/or invasive monitoring, such as
continuous blood pressure monitoring
via an arterial cannula

Intermediate medical
unit (high-medium)
or level 2a

Unstable patients who need nursing


interventions, laboratory workup, and/or
monitoring every 24 hr

1:3

Interventions such as noninvasive


ventilation, IV infusions, or titration
of vasodilators or antiarrhythmic
substances

Telemetry (medium-low)
or level 1a

Stable patients who need close


electrocardiographic monitoring for
nonmalignant arrhythmias or laboratory
work every 24hr. This type of unit or
ward service is mainly for monitoring
purposes.

1:4

IV infusions and titration of


medications such as vasodilators or
antiarrhythmics

Ward (low) or level 0

Stable patients who need testing and


monitoring not more frequently than
every 4 hr

1:5

IV antibiotics, IV chemotherapy,
laboratory and radiographic
work, etc

1:1 to 1:2

Invasive interventions not provided


anywhere else in the institution,
such as cerebrospinal fluid
drainage for elevated intracranial
pressure management, invasive
mechanical ventilation, vasopressors,
extracorporeal membrane
oxygenation, intraaortic balloon
pump, left ventricular assist device, or
continuous renal replacement therapy

If an institution does not have this capability, the patient should be admitted to the next highest level.

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Table 4.

ICU Admission Prioritization Framework

Level of Care

ICU

IMU

Palliative care

Priority

Type of Patient

Priority 1

Critically ill patients who require life support for organ failure, intensive monitoring,
and therapies only provided in the ICU environment. Life support includes invasive
ventilation, continuous renal replacement therapies, invasive hemodynamic monitoring
to direct aggressive hemodynamic interventions, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation,
intraaortic balloon pumps, and other situations requiring critical care (e.g., patients with
severe hypoxemia or in shock)

Priority 2

Patients, as described above, with significantly lower probability of recovery and who would
like to receive intensive care therapies but not cardiopulmonary resuscitation in case of
cardiac arrest (e.g., patients with metastatic cancer and respiratory failure secondary to
pneumonia or in septic shock requiring vasopressors)

Priority 3

Patients with organ dysfunction who require intensive monitoring and/or therapies (e.g.,
noninvasive ventilation), or who, in the clinical opinion of the triaging physician, could
be managed at a lower level of care than the ICU (e.g., postoperative patients who
require close monitoring for risk of deterioration or require intense postoperative care,
patients with respiratory insufficiency tolerating intermittent noninvasive ventilation).
These patients may need to be admitted to the ICU if early management fails to prevent
deterioration or there is no IMU capability in the hospital

Priority 4

Patients, as described above but with lower probability of recovery/survival (e.g., patients
with underlying metastatic disease) who do not want to be intubated or resuscitated. As
above, if the hospital does not have IMU capability, these patients could be considered
for ICU in special circumstances

Priority 5

Terminal or moribund patients with no possibility of recovery; such patients are in general
not appropriate for ICU admission (unless they are potential organ donors). In cases
in which individuals have unequivocally declined intensive care therapies or have
irreversible processes such as metastatic cancer with no additional chemotherapy or
radiation therapy options, palliative care should be initially offered

IMU = intermediate medical unit.

Systems of Prioritization. With the lack of consensus in


regard to the main approach to prioritizing/triaging admissions, several groups have proposed and tested new systems.
Cohen et al (16) have suggested that admissions to the ICU
should be based on functional impairment, rather than just
severity of illness. In a study of medical admissions during
1 year, they showed that functional impairment at the time
of intensivist evaluation was the determining factor influencing ICU acceptance. Patients were less likely to be admitted if
their functional status was poor or they had a do-not-resuscitate order.
The most structured triage system using some vital signs
available is Swedish Adaptive Process Triage, developed in
2006, which uses a combination of complaints and vital signs
to create a total triage score (17). In the validation study,
Barfod et al (18) found that among the vital signs, the best
predictors of hospital mortality were respiratory rate, oxygen
saturation, systolic blood pressure, and Glasgow Coma Scale
score. Among the complaints, dyspnea and altered mental status had the highest association with mortality (12% and 11%,
respectively).
Other studies have reviewed the use of abnormal vital signs
for deciding ICU admissions. OConnell et al (19) reviewed
their data after starting a program in which abnormal vital
signs were used as criteria to trigger patients to be admitted
to an ICU until their condition improved or stabilized. In a
comparison of data over 2 years for more than 5,700 patients,
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211 patients met a trigger for ICU admission based on vital


signs. Because tachypnea is a direct sign of critical illness, as
outlined in the SCCMs Fundamental Critical Care Support
course (20), another study looked at just tachypnea (21) as a
sign for ICU admission. Although this was a retrospective casecontrol study, Farley et al (21) determined that respiratory
rate alone should be a major determinant for ICU admission.
Unfortunately, there is not a reliable list of objective indicators
or their respective specific thresholds for identifying candidates
for ICU admission. As a matter of fact, there is evidence that
some groups of critically ill patients do not present these signs.
Lamantia et al (22) have shown that the sensitivity and the
specificity of abnormal signs to predict death or ICU admission at triage were only 73% (95% CI, 6681) and 50% (95%
CI, 4852), respectively, with a positive likelihood ratio of 1.47
(95% CI, 1.31.6) and negative likelihood ratio of 0.54 (95%
CI, 0.30.6). Although these systems continue to improve and
integrate response algorithms, their low predictive value and
poor performance impede our sole reliance on them (23, 24).
Severe metabolic abnormalities may direct admissions
to the ICU and overall outcomes. Jung et al (25) conducted
a prospective observational, multiple-center study involving
155 patients to evaluate the use of bicarbonate therapy in the
ICU and mortality. Severe metabolic acidemia (pH < 7.20)
was associated with a greater than 57% chance of death. The
authors suggested that earlier admission to the ICU and bicarbonate use were variables associated with better outcome.
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Sprung et al (26) went further by investigating the feasibility of using a triage score to assist in deciding about ICU
admissions. The score incorporated age; diagnosis; systolic
blood pressure; pulse; respiratory rate; Pao2; concentrations
of creatinine, bilirubin, bicarbonate, and albumin; vasopressor use; Glasgow Coma Scale score; Karnofsky performance
status score; operative status; and chronic disorders. The
training and validation samples showed excellent discrimination (area under the receiving operating characteristic curve
> 0.8). However, the tool is in its early stages, the assignment
of the individual score is not simple (a computerized process),
and its appropriateness for making decisions for individual
patients is clearly limited pending further validation; therefore,
it would be premature to introduce it in clinical practice (26).
In another example, Bayraktar et al (27) evaluated a specific
comorbidity index in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
patients in an effort to identify who would benefit from an ICU
stay; however, the authors did not recommend denying ICU
admission based on this score alone.
Several groups base admission to the ICU on severity of
illness as determined by other national organization or local
institutional scores (21, 2838). Most of these tools represent
the best guidance that is available, but most have only been
validated locally and without high-quality data. Most have not
been studied as preadmission tools, but rather in retrospective
assessments. The Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA)
score has been studied to evaluate outcomes in septic patients
with evidence of hypoperfusion at the time of arrival to the
emergency department (ED) and subsequent ICU evaluation
72 hours after admission (39). The authors showed that the
SOFA score provided potentially valuable prognostic information for patients who needed ICU admission. Yet, Sinuff etal
(40) have shown that 24 hours after admission, physicians
predict more accurately than scoring systems whether ICU
patients will survive.
Identifying the Required Level of Care. To reduced preventable cardiac arrests and late ICU admissions, several ways of
providing critical care outside the ICU have been developed. In
1990, Schein et al (41) demonstrated that in-hospital cardiac
arrests are preceded by detectable pathophysiologic changes
associated with clinical deterioration within 8 hours of the
arrest. This led to the establishment of the rapid response team,
also called the rapid response system (RRS). These personnel,
trained in critical care medicine, are dispatched when patients
in general hospital wards have deteriorating conditions that
might merit ICU admission. Several studies have evaluated the
impact of RRS outreach care on ICU admissions (30, 4245).
Most have shown that RRSs have actually reduced ICU admission rates and mortality; however, the widespread use of RRS
tools and validation of these teams are not based on robust
data (45). This subject is discussed at length in Use of Outreach
Programs to Supplement ICU Care section.
In 1999, a group of experts appointed by the Department of
Health in the United Kingdom and led by Dr. Valerie Day suggested that patients in the hospital should be assigned a level of
care based on an assessment of their clinical needs, regardless of
Critical Care Medicine

their location (46). In their review of critical care services published in 2000, they described these levels as follows:

Level 0: regular hospitalized patients with no intensive


monitoring or care requirements.
Level I: patients requiring additional monitoring such as
continuous electrocardiographic monitoring.
Level II: patients requiring more frequent monitoring and
interventions, such as those with single-organ dysfunction,
that cannot be provided in the previous levels.
Level III: patients requiring life-supportive therapies, such
as those with single- or multiorgan failure, which can only
be provided in the ICU.

This classification removes the division between ICU and


other ward services and focuses on each patients specific monitoring and care needs. In fact, intensivists provide critical care
services beyond the ICU borders; now even more with a variety of critical care outreach programs, including intermediate
units, early warning systems, and medical emergency teams
(47). Day and colleagues (46) clearly identified the major
groups of patients regularly managed by intensivists; however,
their system does not address terminal patients requiring life
support and moribund patients.
Maintaining patients in flexible hospital beds can be easy if
there are only monitoring needs such as electrocardiography
but could create logistical problems for intensive care delivery.
One possible solution is critical care outreach. In a recent ward
(cluster)-randomized study of early interventions by a 24-hour
outreach nurse-led team and critical care physician, Priestley
et al (48) showed a significant hospital-mortality reduction for
patients who received the outreach intervention, with an odds
ratio (OR) of death of 0.52 (95% CI, 0.320.97).
Draft Tools to Aid in Patient Prioritization for ICU Admission. Acknowledging the limitations discussed above (e.g., lack
of high-level evidence and validated functional admission/
triage instruments), the ADT Task Force created the following tools for the use during the admission and triage processes
(these tools are only offered as a framework for practical purposes, further study, and validation):

A guide to levels of monitoring, care, and nursing ratios for


bed allocation (Table3): This tool matches the level of care
the patient needs with the type of patient considered appropriate, the nursing ratios expected, and the type of interventions needed.
An ICU admission prioritization framework based on these
levels of monitoring and care requirements (Table4): this
tool provides guidance for prioritizing the patients referred
to ICU for admission.

Benefits of Different Levels and Models of


Critical Care
The survival benefit of critical care for different populations
by age group, diagnosis, length of ICU stay, and place of treatment remains somewhat elusive (49, 50). Although ICU mortality rates are dependent on severity of illness, comorbidities,
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and diagnosis, among other factors, patients hospitalized in an


ICU are at increased risk of mortality after hospital discharge
compared with patients who did not. In a recent survey characterizing the organizational structure and processes of care
in 69U.S. ICUs, 25 of which were medical (36%), 24 surgical
(35%), and 20 of mixed type (29%), the average annual ICU
mortality rate was 11% (49). In multivariable linear regression
adjusted for severity of illness as measured by the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II score, as
well as multiple ICU structure and process factors, the annual
ICU mortality rate was lower in surgical ICUs than in medical
ICUs (5.6% lower [95% CI, 2.48.8]) or mixed ICUs (4.5%
lower [95% CI, 0.48.7]). A lower annual ICU mortality rate
was found among ICUs that had a daily plan-of-care review
(5.8% lower [95% CI, 1.610.0]) and a lower bed-to-nurse
ratio (1.8% lower when the ratio decreased from 2:1 to 1.5:1
(95% CI, 0.253.4]). In contrast, 24-hour intensivist coverage
(p = 0.89) and closed ICU status (p = 0.16) were not associated with a lower annual ICU mortality rate (51).
In a recent cohort study of ICU admissions from a Dutch
national ICU registry linked to administrative records from
an insurance claims database for 91,203 patients from 81
ICUs, the mortality rates at 1, 2, and 3 years after hospital
discharge after an ICU stay were 13%, 19%, and 28%, respectively. Medical patients and patients admitted for cancer had
statistically significantly worse mortality outcomes (adjusted
hazard ratios, 1.41 and 1.94, respectively) compared with
other ICU patients. Urgent surgery patients and patients
with a subarachnoid hemorrhage, trauma, acute renal failure, or severe community-acquired pneumonia did not
differ statistically from the other ICU patients after adjustment for case-mix differences. Although mortality after hospital discharge varied widely among subgroups, most ICU
patients had an increased mortality risk in the subsequent
15 years after hospital discharge compared to the general
population (52).
Overall, studies assessing the benefit of ICU care are limited
to observational studies because of the ethical considerations
of performing randomized controlled trials to answer these
questions. We have categorized studies of ICU benefit into four
types of comparisons in order to best evaluate the literature
and to make recommendations.
Care in the ICU Versus Intensive Care in the Wards.
Recommendations:

We suggest that patients with invasive mechanical ventilation or complex life-threatening conditions, including
those with sepsis, be treated in an ICU. Patients should not
be weaned from mechanical ventilation on the general ward
unless the ward is a high-dependency/intermediate unit
(grade 2C).
We suggest that critically ill patients in the ED or on the
general ward be transferred to a higher level of care, such as
the ICU, in an expeditious manner (grade 2D).

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Critical care does occur in hospital wards, usually during


the activation of a RRS, deploying a rapid response team, or
when a critical care bed is not immediately available to an
acutely ill general ward patient. In some institutions, chronic
critically ill patients are transferred from the ICU to the general ward for such processes as weaning from mechanical
ventilation or starting rehabilitation. Although a randomized controlled trial would be difficult, several retrospective
and observational studies have favored the benefits of critical care in an ICU. Worse than predicted survival is noted
in the absence of ICU care for critically ill patients who
receive mechanical ventilation and for those diagnosed with
sepsis on general wards (53, 54). The ICU provides better
monitoring, decreased endotracheal tuberelated complications, and more active ventilator management (55). There
is an increased risk of cardiac arrest for sicker ward patients
when medical ICU beds are not available and increased risk
of mortality and ICU length of stay (LOS) if there is a delay
in admitting a critically ill patient from the hospital ward
to the ICU (5557). A delay of 4 hours or more in transferring patients from the hospital ward to the ICU was associated with a significant increase in mortality in a community
hospital (58). Young et al (58) found that patients who were
rapidly transferred to the ICU after identification of a problem (rapid transfers) had a hospital mortality rate of 11%,
whereas those who arrived in the ICU after 4 hours (slow
transfers) had a hospital mortality rate of 41% (relative risk
[RR], 3.5; 95% CI, 1.49.5; p = 0.004). The slow transfer
patients had a lower, but not significantly so, mean pre-ICU
APACHE II score (162 vs 192; p = 0.09); in addition
to a higher mortality rate, the slow transfers had a longer median hospital LOS (14 vs 9 d; p = 0.03) and higher
median hospital cost ($34,000 vs $21,000; p = 0.01). A similar increase in ICU and hospital mortality and increase in
LOS have been found for critically ill ED patients who have a
6-hour or longer delay in transfer to an ICU (59). Although
complex postoperative patients benefit from admission to
the ICU, the routine surgical patient may well be monitored in a non-ICU environment provided that the nursing staff has been adequately educated in the care of those
patients (6062).
General ICU Versus Specialized ICUs.
Recommendations:
Although investment in ICU specialization may not
improve survival:

We suggest avoiding admitting to a specialized ICU patients


with a primary diagnosis not associated with that specialty
(i.e., boarding) (grade 2C).
We suggest the admission of neurocritically ill patients to a
neuro-ICU, especially those with a diagnosis of intracerebral hemorrhage or head injury (grade 2C).

Multispecialty or general ICUs are typically located within


smaller, community-based hospitals or may be utilized in tertiary institutions for critically ill patients who have diagnoses
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that do not fit into one of the specialty ICUs. However, the complexities of critical care make it difficult to conclusively demonstrate efficacy for specialization (63). Studies have suggested that
the organization and management of an ICU may have more
of an effect on outcomes (64, 65). ICU specialization is likely
motivated by physician convenience and the pooling of clinical
resources around specialty departments to improve efficiency
(66). Although some studies have shown the benefit of specialization of ICUs for certain fields, the literature does not support
a survival benefit for specialized over general ICU care in the
case of common admitting diagnoses such as acute coronary
syndrome, ischemic stroke, intracranial hemorrhage, pneumonia, abdominal surgery, or coronary artery bypass graft surgery.
Admission to a specialized ICU of a patient with a primary diagnosis not associated with that specialty (i.e., boarding) is associated with increased risk-adjusted mortality (66).
Although there are notable limitations in published
studies, cumulative evidence suggests that neurocritical
care unit patients show improved outcomes when compared
with the treatment in a general ICU, especially for intracerebral hemorrhage and head injury (6770). Neuro-ICU
patients were reported to undergo more invasive intracranial and hemodynamic monitoring, continuous electroencephalogram monitoring, tracheostomy, and nutritional
support as well as to receive less IV sedation compared with
general ICU patients, possibly explaining the observed differences in outcome between neurocritical care and general
ICUs (68, 69).
Modern trauma care has also become highly specialized
for the critically ill patient with multiple-system injuries.
Despite the development of surgical trauma ICUs, little
information currently exists to compare outcomes with general ICUs. Most patients admitted to a trauma ICU appear
to be sicker and more severely injured than general-ICU
patients, making accurate comparisons and retrospective
studies difficult (71).
Different Staffing Models.
Recommendations:

We recommend a high-intensity ICU model, characterized


by the intensivist being responsible for day-to-day management of the patient, either in a closed ICU setting (in
which the intensivist serves as the primary physician) or
through a hospital protocol for mandatory intensivist consultation (grade 1B).
We do not recommend a 24-hour/7-day intensivist model
if the ICU has a high-intensity staffing model (as described
above) during the day or night (grade 1A).
We suggest optimizing ICU nursing resources and nursing
ratios, taking into consideration available nursing resources
(e.g., levels of education, support personnel, specific workloads), patients needs, and patients medical complexity
(grade 2D).
Because of current constraints on the availability and cost
of 24-hour intensivist coverage, further studies are needed

Critical Care Medicine

to address the efficacy of coverage with critical caretrained


advanced practice providers, including nurse practitioners
and physician assistants, and critical care telemedicine
(ungraded).
This section will assess staffing models in regard to intensity of ICU physician participation in treatment of the critically ill patient, both in terms of low- and high-intensity ICU
models and 24-hour intensivist care. The high-intensity model
is characterized by the intensivist being responsible for dayto-day management of the patient, either in a closed ICU setting or through a hospital protocol for mandatory intensivist
consultation. A low-intensity model involves elective intensivist consultation, either in an open ICU setting (in which
patient management is mainly by another primary physician)
or because there is no intensivist available. The superiority of
closed ICU and high-intensity staffing in improving the outcomes of critically ill patients is supported by an abundant
amount of evidence, as well as recommendations from the
Leapfrog Group and the American College of Critical Care
Medicine (7279). Results of the latest systematic review and
meta-analysis of ICU physician staffing models (80) further
support the high-intensity staffing model. The authors showed
that when compared with low-intensity staffing, the highintensity model was associated with lower hospital mortality
(pooled RR, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.700.99) and lower ICU mortality
(pooled RR, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.680.96).
Our assessment of the literature reveals that the greater use
of intensivists in the ICU led to significant reductions in ICU
and hospital mortality and LOS. Although most of the studies
were observational, these findings were consistent across a variety of populations and hospital settings. These improved outcomes were not only limited to medical ICUs but also included
neurological and surgical ICUs and oncologic patient populations (8185). Patients receiving care under the high-intensity
intensivist staffing model were more likely to receive evidencebased care, including prophylaxis for deep vein thrombosis,
stress ulcer prophylaxis, and spontaneous breathing trials (86).
Interestingly, one study showed a higher mortality rate with
the use of a high-intensity staffing model, but it was limited
to patients with low severity of illness, suggesting that patients
who are not critically ill may be exposed to unnecessary risk in
the ICU (74, 87).
The literature supporting the need for 24-hour/7-day intensivist coverage of the ICU is not as abundant and presents
several controversial issues. Although continuous 24-hour onsite critical care specialist coverage of an ICU has benefits in
improved processes of care, increased staff and family satisfaction, decreased complication rate, and shorter hospital LOS, the
evidence on improving patient mortality is weaker (8890). In
a retrospective study of 49 ICUs, the mortality rate improved
with nighttime coverage of the ICU only when a low-intensity
daytime staffing model was used (90). Although there was no
difference in mortality in comparison with partial-day highintensity coverage, 24-hour intensivist coverage was associated
with improved compliance with evidence-based processes of
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care. This study supports previous studies showing that intensivists improve outcomes regardless of the time of day (day or
night) that they care for critically ill patients. However, adding
intensivists at night after being present during the day did not
confer an additional benefit. In a more recent study, van der
Wilden et al (91) showed no improvement in mortality among
2,829 patients admitted during two 13-month periods, before
and after a 24-hour/7-day intensivist program was introduced
in their ICU. Although they found that fewer blood products
and radiographs were ordered, they suggested that the healthcare value may be decreased under the 24/7 model. A recent
Canadian crossover study on the effects of 24-hour intensivist
presence in the ICU showed no difference in adjusted hospital
mortality (OR, 1.22; p = 0.44), ICU LOS (p = 0.46), or family satisfaction (p = 0.79). In addition, nurses reported significantly more role conflicts (p < 0.001) (92).
In the systematic review and meta-analysis mentioned
above (80), 24-hour in-hospital intensivist coverage did
not improve hospital mortality (pooled RR, 0.97; 95% CI,
0.891.1) or ICU mortality (RR, 0.88; 95% CI, 0.701.1). The
authors also found that hospital mortality varied throughout
different decades, ranging from a significant effect of this type
of coverage in the 1980s (pooled RR, 0.74; 95% CI, 0.630.87)
to a nonsignificant effect from 2010 to 2012 (pooled RR, 1.2;
95% CI, 0.841.8). The impact on ICU mortality followed this
same pattern; pooled RR was 0.49 for 19801989 (95% CI,
0.330.71) and 1.0 for 20102012 (95% CI, 0.532.1). Kerlin et
al (93) published the only randomized study to date, in which
daytime in-hospital intensivist coverage was supplemented
by either nighttime coverage by in-hospital intensivists or by
nighttime availability of the daytime intensivists for telephone
consultation; the results clearly demonstrated that there was
no difference in ICU or hospital LOS, in-hospital mortality, or
readmission.
A multidisciplinary model led by an intensivist and 24-hour
care delivery by highly skilled physicians gained popularity
during the past decade (74, 94). However, around-the-clock
on-site intensivist coverage may not be feasible for all ICUs
because of the shortage of available intensivists, the financial constraints in todays healthcare climate, and the lack of
evidence supporting this approach. Coverage with critical
caretrained advanced practice providers, including nurse
practitioners and physician assistants, and telemedicine may
be feasible alternatives (74, 95, 96).
Nursing staffing has been a matter of serious debate for
more than a decade in the United States (97), but the lack of
consensus in regard to the appropriate ratios, projected nursing deficits, and costs have prevented widespread acceptance.
Cho and Yun (98) have shown that increased ICU and general
ward nursing staffing are associated with lower in-hospital and
30-day mortality and better delivery of basic care. In a review
of the literature investigating the effect of hospital staffing on
infection rates, Stone et al (99) found that, among 38 studies where nursing staffing was considered, only seven did not
find a statistical association. Another recent literature review
spanning 20022011 failed to find a significant correlation
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between ICU nursing staffing and adverse patient outcomes;


most of the studies were observational and retrospective (100).
Needleman et al (101) reported an association between better
care and nursing hospital staffing. More recently, Needleman
et al (102) correlated inadequate nursing staffing and increased
hospital mortality. Regardless, government bodies have already
established parameters for reimbursement that require specific
nursing ratios of one nurse to two patients in areas in which
critically ill patients are managed, such as the ICU and burn
units (103). In the United States, California was the first state
to introduce mandatory staffing ratios (1:2) (104).
Although 1:1 and 1:2 nurse-to-patient ratios are commonly
used for critically ill patients, depending on severity of illness
and patient care needs, there is insufficient evidence to establish
a particular nursing ICU staffing ratio because the inadequacy
of nursing resources and patients needs and their complexity
also need to be considered in the equation (105108). However,
there is growing evidence that inadequate staffing affects delivery of basic care and increases the risk of in-hospital death (106,
109). The impact of nursing rationing, and of the complexity
of the evaluation of nursing resources, on outcomes is further
discussed in Impact of Rationing on ICU Outcomes section.
The organizational structure and the system of healthcare
delivery may actually influence the process of care and patient
outcome more than intensivist staffing alone. Intensivists practicing medicine must organize their ICUs in ways that are ideal
for implementing the standards of care based on the available
evidence. Appropriately organized ICUs that utilize evidencebased bundles and protocols for delivering care to the critically
ill have generated improved patient outcomes (64, 65).
Short Versus Long ICU Care.
Recommendation:

We suggest that patients receive ICU treatment if their prognosis for recovery and quality of life is acceptable regardless
of their length of ICU stay. However, factors such as age,
comorbidities, prognosis, underlying diagnosis, and treatment modalities that can influence survival should be taken
into account (ungraded).

Practicing critical care medicine involves treatment to sustain and prolong the life of the critically ill patient. The evolution of critical care has been to treat patients of all ages with a
wide variety and severity of illness. For most of these patients,
establishing a good quality of life is important because prolongation of life may result in an unacceptable health outcome (110, 111). The longer one remains in ICU, the worse
ones prognosis is likely to be and the more resources that are
likely to be expended (112). Older patients and those with prolonged requirement for life-supportive therapies (mechanical
ventilation, dialysis, and vasopressor support), pre-existing
comorbidities, and multisystem organ failure have higher
mortality rates (112, 113). The dominant reason for prolonged
ICU stays is often multiple organ failure, ventilatory support,
or single-organ failure in nonventilated patients (112). Thus,
the question that arises for patients that remain in the ICU
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for a prolonged stay is: Will their outcome or quality of life


be acceptable after discharge? Despite tremendous variation in
what is considered a prolonged ICU stay (varying from over
5d to over 21 d), studies have shown that even with high levels of ICU therapeutic intensity, there were reasonable hospital
survival rates and quality of life after discharge (110, 114119).
This was seen in both medical and surgical ICUs, except for
one study that showed a poor rate of survival and return to
previous quality of life after cardiac surgery associated with a
prolonged ICU stay (120). The benefit of prolonged ICU intervention can be seen even for elderly patients and those with
a malignancy (118, 119). However, comparison among these
studies was significantly limited because of lack of consistency
in what was considered a prolonged ICU stay or quality of
life. Further research with standardization of these variables is
necessary to determine both predictors and sequelae of a prolonged ICU course (121). Until that time, limiting care on the
basis of length of ICU stay, diagnosis, or treatment will be difficult. In future research, attention must be given as well to how
transfer practices to long-term acute-care hospitals (LTACHs;
Long-Term Acute Care Hospitals section) affect in-hospital
mortality and LOS (122).
Future Directions and Research
Additional admission-related research should be focused on
developing and validating specific criteria for determining
appropriate admissions for ICU care, underlining the need for
the development of simple and accurate ICU admission triage
scoring. Unlike the severity-of-illness scoring systems developed to predict the outcome of patients already in the ICU,
pre-ICU scoring focuses on determining the point at which
patients would benefit from intensive care interventions. The
development and proper validation of ICU criteria for admissions should be based on available resources (e.g., number of
beds, staffing), acuity, diagnosis, specific measurable parameters, and other factors such as prognosis.
Research is needed in the areas of ICU staffing models and
practitioners to patients ratios, effects of teaching, burnout,
factors that influence optimal ratios, impact of technology,
and addition of other medical professionals (123). The current literature provides multiple beneficial effects associated
with the integration of physician assistants and advance nurse
practitioners in the ICU and other acute-care settings (124).
Consequently, staffing models that include advance practitioners in acute and critical care environments could be a viable
model to address intensivists shortages. The impact of introducing all these variables on patients outcomes and healthcare
costs needs to be further explored.

Triage
General Considerations
Recommendations:

We suggest that every ICU institute methods for prioritizing and triaging patients, with policies and guidelines that
are disclosed in advance (ungraded).

Critical Care Medicine

We suggest that triage decisions are made explicitly and


without bias. Ethnic origin, race, sex, social status, sexual
preference, or financial status should never be considered in
triage decisions (ungraded).
We suggest that, under ideal conditions, patients be admitted or discharged strictly on their potential to benefit from
ICU care (ungraded).

Triage is the process of placing patients at their most appropriate level of care, based upon their need for medical treatment and the assessment that they will benefit from ICU
care. Patients are admitted to the ICU from several sources
(ED, operating room, intermediate care unit, general ward or
floor bed, or by transfer from another hospital). Whatever the
source of these patients, most ICU admissions are emergent
and unplanned.
ICU care has been demonstrated to reduce mortality in
severely ill patient populations (28-d mortality OR, 0.73; 95%
CI, 0.620.87; and 90-d mortality OR, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.660.93)
(125). However, in a prospective observational study, Simchen
et al (126) showed that, after adjusting for age and severity of
illness, 3-day survival was higher in the ICU patient population than in patients admitted to other areas of the hospital
(p = 0.018), but thereafter, there was no difference in survival
(p = 0.9). The authors concluded that there is a window of critical opportunity that is lost if access is not granted in time (126).
Triage decisions are based upon a combination of factors,
including written criteria, available resources, and biases in the
triage process that vary from person to person (127) and from
institution to institution (128). A study of hospitals within the
Veterans Administration system showed wide variability in
ICU admission for patients with the same predicted mortality;
the investigators concluded that access to critical care services
may depend, in part, on the hospital at which a patient seeks
his or her care.
In general, patients admitted to the ICU should meet one or
more of the following criteria:

Require care involving specialized competency of ICU


staff that is not widely available elsewhere in the hospital
(e.g., invasive mechanical ventilation, management of shock,
extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, and intraaortic balloon pump).
Have clinical instability (e.g., status epilepticus, hypoxemia,
and hypotension).
Be at high risk for imminent decline (e.g., impending
intubation).

The process for triage described in the 1994 SCCM consensus statement on this topic (129) has the following common
elements: patient assessment, urgency determination, priority
of care based on urgency, resource analysis, documentation,
and disposition. The statement recommends consideration of
factors such as likelihood of successful outcome, patients life
expectancy in the context of the disease, wishes of the patient
and/or surrogate, and missed opportunities to treat other
patients. The authors recommend that decisions made during
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the triage process be explicit, fair, and just without biases such
as religion, ethnicity/race, sexual orientation, social background, or ability to pay.
In 2007, a Task Force for Mass Critical Care Working Group
made several suggestions for expanding critical care services
emergently and conducting the triage process in disaster situations (130). Among the suggestions was that healthcare facilities need to develop the infrastructure, acquire the necessary
resources, or ensure the transfer of patients to facilities that
have these capabilities before any decision to ration critical care is made during disaster situations where critical care
capacity is exceeded and augmentation has to be implemented.
The European Society of Intensive Care Medicines Task Force
for Intensive Care Unit Triage during an Influenza Epidemic
or Mass Disaster has recommended that units develop, among
other things, an Incident Management System, objective criteria for triage that can be applied ethically and transparently,
and fair policies with admission and discharge criteria (131).
(In addition to the information on triage in epidemics, mass
casualty incidents (MCIs), and natural disasters later in this
section, further discussion about triage in times of bed shortage is found in Rationing section.)
Overtriage Versus Undertriage
Recommendation:

We suggest that some overtriage is more acceptable and


preferable to undertriage (grade 2D).

A patient may not need intensive care if effective therapeutic treatment can be delivered in another hospital setting
without significantly compromising the patients care. An ideal
triage model would identify all patients in need of ICU care
with an acceptable level of overtriage, or the understanding
that some patients admitted will, in retrospect, not have been
sick enough to have required the ICU. Because triage involves
the use of judgment, not all decisions will be accurate all of
the time. Some overtriage may be preferable to undertriage in
order to reduce life-threatening undertriage.
Over- and undertriage rates are affected by who performs
the patient selection (132) and what definitions are used (133).
It has been reported that for trauma patients anesthesiologists
have lower overtriage (35% vs 66%, respectively) and undertriage rates (2% vs 35%, respectively) than paramedics making
decisions in the field (132). In that study, undertriage was associated with a significantly higher mortality risk (OR [adjusted
for injury severity score], 2.34; 95% CI, 1.593.43; p < 0.001).
However, in mass casualty events, overtriage can be as deleterious as undertriage because a large volume of noncritical casualties could affect the management of the critically ill (134). A
linear correlation has been noted between a higher mortality
rate and a higher percentage of overtriaged patients in mass
casualties due to terrorist bombings (135). Secondary overtriage, or transfer of patients between facilities to higher levels of
care, has been found to range from as low as 6.838% in a rural
trauma setting (136). In a prospective observational study of
17 unannounced mass casualty-training exercises in Berlin
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hospitals between 2010 and 2011, the accuracy of in-hospital


triage was only 61%. They found a 24% rate of overtriage and
a 16% rate of undertriage (137).
Transfer to the ICU From the ED
Recommendations:

We suggest minimizing the transfer time of critically ill


patients from the ED to the ICU (< 6hr in nontrauma
patients) (grade 2D).
We suggest that, considering the frequent lack of rapid ICU
bed availability, emergency medicine practitioners be prepared to deliver critical care in the ED (ungraded).

In many hospitals, the majority of ICU admissions are


through the ED. Patients are seen and stabilized by emergency
medicine personnel. Because of a shortage of readily available
empty beds in many ICUs, patients may spend hours being cared
for in the ED by its staff. In one survey of 3,562 ED caregivers,
half answered that ED patients requiring admission to the ICU
were rarely transferred from the ED to the ICU within 1 hour
(138). In a cross-sectional analytical study, ED patients with a
6-hour or higher delay in ICU transfer had higher ICU mortality
(10.7% vs 8.4% for patients transferred within 6hr; p < 0.01) and
hospital mortality (17.4% vs 12.9%; p < 0.001) (59). In a study of
trauma and emergency general surgery patients, the authors concluded that experienced clinicians could effectively triage more
critically injured patients to earlier ICU admission and thereby
prevent any increased mortality associated with a longer ED stay.
The authors initially categorized patients as nondelayed when
the transfer occurred within the first 3 hours, but they changed
the time threshold to compare their results to the findings of
Chalfin et al (59). They found that patients admitted with less
than a 6-hour delay were more seriously injured and had worse
outcomes than those admitted with a longer delay (139). Horwitz
et al (140) showed that the transfer of a patient from the ED to
an internal medicine ward is associated with adverse events that
can be due to issues with poor communication, environment,
workload, information technology, patient flow, and assignment
of responsibility. The authors suggested that system-based interventions aimed at these issues could improve patient safety. These
findings also suggest the existence of a care gap between the ED
and the ward that should not necessarily be solved in the ICU.
With a projected increase in numbers of critically ill patients presenting to EDs, the shortage of intensivists, and the shortage of
readily available ICU beds, there will be an increased emphasis on
the provision of critical care by the ED physician (141). A potential alternative could be the admission of some of these patients
to intermediate care units.
ICU Transfer After Admissions From ED to a Less
Intense Level of Care
Recommendation:

In addition to optimization of the triage process from the


ED to the ICU, we suggest close monitoring and timely
intervention for those who are triaged to the ward. These
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interventions might reduce delayed transfers to the ICU of


undertriaged patients and prevent acute deterioration of
those still requiring stabilization after hospital admission
(grade 2D).
Delgado et al (142) found that ED patients admitted to a
less intense level of care with pneumonia, chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease, myocardial infarction, or sepsis were at
increased risk for unplanned transfer to the ICU. The authors
concluded that better triage from the ED, earlier intervention,
or closer monitoring to prevent acute decompensation might
benefit this population. In another study of patients with
community-acquired pneumonia, Brown et al (143) showed
that initial ward triage of patients who were later transferred
to the ICU was associated with a twofold higher 30-day mortality rate. Likewise, a retrospective Australian study showed
that patients transferred to the ICU within 24 hours of admission to the ward from the ED had a significantly higher 30-day
mortality rate than patients admitted to the ICU directly from
the ED (144). Other studies also show that patients transferred
to a more intense level of care following admission to the hospital have higher mortality and LOS (145147). RRSs were
created to minimize delays in ICU admission through early
recognition and response to patients who are deteriorating in
general wards. Use of these teams is discussed further in Use of
Outreach Programs to Supplement ICU Care section.
Unplanned ICU Admissions From the Operating
Room
Recommendation:

We suggest that patients with risk factors for postoperative


instability or decompensation be closely monitored and
managed in a higher level of care unit than the ward in the
immediate postoperative period (ungraded).

Unplanned admissions to the ICU from the operating room


may be anesthetic related (19.4%) or due to the surgical and
medical conditions of the patient (148). In a study by Sobol etal
(149), a low surgical Apgar score, which gives a numeric value
to intraoperative estimated blood loss, lowest mean arterial
pressure, and lowest heart rate, correlated with clinical decision
making regarding ICU admission after high-risk intraabdominal surgery. However, the authors did not provide information
about the outcomes of these patients (e.g., LOS, mortality) or
about patients with similar scores who were triaged to the wards
but later admitted to the ICU. In another study of unplanned
admissions to the ICU after elective total hip arthroplasty, factors predictive of unplanned ICU admission were age greater
than 75 years, revision surgery, creatinine clearance less than
60mL/min, prior myocardial infarction, and body mass index
greater than 35kg/m2. With one risk factor, the risk of ICU
admission was 40%, and with two, three, four, and five factors,
the risks of admission were 75%, 93.5%, 98.5%, and greater than
99%, respectively (150). Another study identified RRS activations that occurred within 48 hours after surgery and found that
preoperative opioid use, history of central neurologic disease,
Critical Care Medicine

and intraoperative hemodynamic instability were associated


with postoperative decompensation (151).
Transfer of Patients From Outside Facilities
Recommendation:

There are insufficient data to make a recommendation


for or against ICU-to-ICU interhospital transfer (no
recommendation).

Transfer of patients to a tertiary-care ICU from the ED of a


referring hospital is associated with lower mortality and LOS
than transfers from referring hospitals ICUs (152). Gerber
et al (152) showed a significant difference in the outcomes of
patients transferred to their ICU from outside facilities EDs and
ICUs. For patients transferred from an ED, they found a lower
mortality rate (21% vs 33%; p = 0.0031), ICU LOS (4.79.3
vs 17.39.1 d; p = 0.018), and hospital LOS (14.421.8 vs
21.830.8 d; p = 0.017), despite the fact that the two groups
of patients had similar survival probability (Simplified Acute
Physiology Score [SAPS] II 0.77 for ED-transferred patients vs
0.71 for ICU-transferred patients; p = 0.13). In another study
by Duke and Green, acute interhospital transfers due to lack
of available ICU beds in the referring hospital were associated
with a delay in ICU admission and a longer stay in the ICU
and hospital, but the study was underpowered to show whether
there was a statistically significant difference in mortality (153).
Newgard et al (154) investigated the impact of transferring
patients out of nontertiary centers within the Oregon State
Trauma System. Among the 10,176 trauma patients first evaluated in 42 nontertiary centers, 37% were transferred to level
I and II centers. A propensity-adjusted analysis suggested that
early transfer to a higher level of care was associated with lower
in-hospital mortality (OR, 0.67; 95% CI, 0.480.94; p = 0.009).
The benefit was noted in patients transferred to a level I center
(OR, 0.62; 95% CI, 0.400.95; p = 0.001), but not in patients
transferred to a level II center (OR, 0.82; 95% CI, 0.471.43;
p=0.42) (154).
In 2009, there were over 128 million estimated ED visits in
the United States, and approximately 1.5% of these patients
were transferred to a higher level of care facility to receive
treatments not available in the referring centers. Kindermann
et al (155) reported that certain populations are more prone
to transfer; among them, patients aged 65 years or older and
infants. They also found that the 10 most frequent causes
for transfer were, in order, shock, intrauterine hypoxia/birth
asphyxia, live birth, respiratory distress syndrome (newborn),
aneurysm, intentional self-injury, paralysis, acute myocardial
infarction, short gestation, and acute cerebrovascular disease.
The Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act from 1986
regulates transfer activities.
Factors That Affect Triage Decisions
Recommendation:

We suggest that all ICUs have designated additional equivalent beds, equipment, and staff necessary to support the
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critically ill during a MCI emergency response (ungraded).


The goal of triage is to match resources to the needs of critically ill and injured patients. In times of ICU bed shortages,
age, illness severity, code status (156), baseline functional status, and admission diagnosis have been used to triage patients
(127, 157, 158). Some of the variables used for triage include
age, diagnosis, creatinine clearance, WBC count, platelet count,
albumin level, use of vasopressors, Glasgow Coma Scale score,
Karnofsky performance status score, operative status, and
chronic disorders (26). Abnormal vital signs, including the type
and number, are also strongly associated with ICU admission
and adverse outcome (19, 159); however, in the multivariate
analysis, only heart rate greater than 111 beats/min, peripheral
capillary oxygen saturation (SpO2) less than 89%, and Glasgow
Coma Scale score less than 8 were significantly associated with
outcome (159). Sprung et al (160) showed that physicians use
age, admitting diagnosis, severity of illness, the number of
ICU beds available, and operative status to make triage decisions. Reasons for ICU refusal include patient too well, patient
too sick, lack of beds, and need for more information (161,
162). In a prospective evaluation of ICU refusals, Joynt et al
(163) demonstrated that denying ICU admission is common
and that age, severity of illness, and diagnosis were important
factors in making the decision. In a multicenter, multinational
cohort study, Iapichino et al (125) found that the following
factors were all associated with supporting ICU admission: bed
availability (OR, 3.22; 95% CI, 2.763.75), Karnofsky score of
greater than 70 (OR, 1.82; 95% CI, 1.422.33), Karnofsky score
of 4070 (OR, 2.84; 95% CI, 2.233.62), no SAPS comorbidities (OR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.052.15), hematological malignancy
(OR, 4.08; 95% CI, 2.267.36), emergency surgery (OR, 4.44;
95% CI, 3.495.64), elective surgery (OR, 4.10; 95% CI, 3.30
5.09), trauma (OR, 1.94; 95% CI, 1.243.01), vascular involvement (OR, 1.68; 95% CI, 1.262.24), and treatment versus
observation (OR, 2.99; 95% CI, 2.543.52). Performing more
than one triage was associated with refusal (OR, 0.69; 95% CI,
0.580.82).
Triage over the phone has been associated with significantly
poorer compliance with triage recommendations and with
refusal (127). Garrouste-Orgeas et al (164) have also shown
that refusals were associated with the ability of the physician to
examine the patients.
Mery and Kahn (165) showed that for patients with sudden
clinical deterioration, lack of ICU beds decreases the probability of
ICU admission and increases the probability of initiating comfort
measures on the ward, but did not affect hospital mortality. Their
study corroborated the findings of Sprung et al (160), indicating
that number of beds available is an important factor associated
with triaging, as are ICU physician seniority and autonomy. A policy that directs critically ill medical patients to an alternative coronary care unit within the institution has been suggested as a safe
practice with careful planning during times of lack of bed availability (166). Delayed ICU admission due to a lack of bed availability when first referred is associated with increased mortality, as
is refusal of ICU admission (106, 160, 167). More recently, Gabler
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et al (168) have reported an increase in ICU mortality associated


with high census secondary to surges in capacity strain. The relationship was stronger if the patients acuity was higher or the ICU
had a closed physician-staffing model (OR, 1.07; 95% CI, 1.02
1.12). In contrast to the lack of calls for increasing ICU capacity
during normal operations, several groups of experts advocate for
increasing surge capacity when the available critical care services
are overwhelmed by disasters (169, 170). Recommendations to
expand critical care surge capacity include 1) stockpiling equipment, medications, and other essential supplies to provide critical care services (e.g., endotracheal tubes, sedatives, ventilators),
2) using first all additional monitored beds in the facility (e.g.,
telemetry beds, post anesthesia care unit beds), 3) using non-ICU
areas with emergency enhancements (e.g., using reserve monitors,
beds), 4) organizing mobile units, and 5) transferring patients to
other facilities not affected (170172).
Triage Decision Makers
Recommendation:

We suggest that a designated person or service, with control


over resources and active involvement, be responsible for
making ICU triage decisions during normal or emergency
conditions (ungraded).

Intensivists make the majority of the triage decisions to admit


to an ICU, but in some hospitals, the decisions are made by the
hospitalists, residents, ICU charge nurse, hospital nursing supervisor, ED physician, or other attending physicians. In one study,
an ICU triage service led by critical care physicians from 7:30 am
to 10 pm was shown to have an impact on patient flow by reducing the number of pending admissions, the number of patients
waiting for ICU discharge, and the surgical ICU LOS (173). All
of these reductions would make an ICU bed more readily available for new admissions. In another study, hospitalists made triage decisions for patients to be admitted, facilitated their transfer
from the ED, made twice-daily ICU bed management rounds,
and regularly visited the ED to assess flow. These interventions
decreased the transfer time from the ED to the ICU (174). These
observations seem to indicate that having clinicians monitoring
and coordinating admissions improves patient flow.
In a recent study, Rathi et al (175) showed the lack of agreement among clinicians prioritizing patients for triage using the
prioritization model from the previous SCCM ADT guidelines
(5) (described in Previous Guidelines and Current Status section). This finding suggests that even with apparently clear
guidelines, significant disagreement among practitioners is
possible and that a more robust algorithm is necessary. It also
indicates that there are subjective elements during the prioritization process that need to be better understood. A study by
Azoulay et al (127) investigating the compliance with recommendations for triage to intensive care in 26F ICUs showed
that triage recommendations were rarely observed. They also
showed that patients with certain diagnoses were more frequently admitted (e.g., patients in shock or respiratory failure
with no cancer) than others (e.g., patients > 65 yr, with metastatic cancer or heart failure).
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Triage for Admission of Elderly Patients


Recommendation:

We suggest basing the decision to admit an elderly (> 80 yr)


patient to an ICU on the patients comorbidities, severity
of illness, prehospital functional status, and patient preferences with regard to life-sustaining treatment, not on their
chronological age (grade 2C).

With the aging of America, using age as a potential criterion for triage will have implications for resource utilization
and potential admissions to an ICU. In a retrospective study
of 1,970 patients evaluated by the trauma team, Peschman
et al (176) indicated that independent of specific physiologic
parameters, age alone was a risk factor to be admitted to the
hospital after a trauma. Other studies reviewed age as it relates
to sepsis and trauma and concluded that elderly patients may
need to be admitted to the ICU based on associated risk factors and comorbid conditions (177181). However, many
studies have shown that elderly patients have more ICU rejections than younger patients (160, 163, 164, 182). In the observational Eldicus study, Sprung et al (182) showed a greater
benefit in the elderly population admitted to European ICUs
than in those who were not admitted. Most authors now agree
that ICU triage decisions should not be based on the age of the
patient alone (183185). The admission diagnosis and severity
of illness, but not age, determine ICU survival (180).
In 2013, Sprung et al (186) published the results of the
most recent Eldicus consensus process to develop recommendations on triage. The authors agreed that the percentage of
elderly patients seeking a higher level of care will increase in
the near future and that age per se should not be the reason
for critical care services denial, rather the decision should be
based on physiological status (100% consensus among the participants). In regard to triage, the participants in the consensus
agreed that the most important factors to take into consideration when triaging are 1) likelihood of successful outcome
(100% consensus), 2) patients life expectancy due to disease(s)
(97% agreement), 3) health and other needs of the community (97% agreement), 4) missed opportunities to treat other
patients (94% agreement), 5) anticipated quality of life of the
patient (93% agreement), 6) wishes of the patient and/or surrogate (93% agreement), 7) burden of those affected, including
financial or psychological costs (71% agreement), and 8) institutions moral and religious values (32% agreement).
In addition, assessing treatment preferences for life-sustaining therapies is important, especially in elderly patients. This
information is essential considering that many triage decisions
are made without adequate informed consent. The recent twopart Elderlys Thoughts about Intensive Care unit Admission
for life-sustaining treatments study (187, 188) showed that
individuals aged 80 years and older were more likely to refuse
ICU treatments (27% refusal for noninvasive mechanical ventilation, 43% for invasive mechanical ventilation, and 63% for
renal replacement therapy) after viewing films of scenarios
involving the use of ICU treatments. In the second part of the
observational simulation study, examining physician decisions
Critical Care Medicine

for the same patients, decisions that noninvasive mechanical


ventilation, invasive mechanical ventilation, and renal replacement therapy were warranted were made 86%, 78%, and 62%
of the time (187). The findings identified that physicians making these decisions for elderly patients had low agreement.
Previous ICU stay or cancer affected medical decisions regarding invasive mechanical ventilation; a living spouse or respiratory disease affected renal replacement therapy decisions. The
physicians decisions also changed based on ICU bed availability and on knowledge of patient preferences, which in many
instances is unknown to the practitioner when making emergency decisions.
Triage for Admission of Patients With Malignancies
Recommendations:

We suggest that ICU access of cancer patients be decided


on the basis established for all critical care patients,
with careful consideration of their long-term prognosis
(ungraded).
We suggest that ICU care of all critically ill patients, in particular cancer patients with advanced disease, be reassessed
and discussed with the patient, next of kin, legal representative, or power of attorney at regular intervals (ungraded).

Cancer patients, in particular patients with hematologic


malignancies, are often considered poor candidates for ICU
admission because of their historic high mortality rates, and
their access to critical care services may be limited. In a study
of 320 consecutive patients with hematological malignancies admitted to an ICU, Magid et al (189) reported ICU and
1-year mortality rates of 44% and 77%, respectively. The mortality rate of these patients (77%) was more than twice that of
the other patients admitted to the ICU (33%). However, the
authors concluded that they did not have tools to differentiate
between those for whom transfer to an ICU would and would
not be beneficial, and they recommended a strategy of admitting hematological patients to an ICU using the same criteria
that are used with any other patient (189). In another study,
hospital survival rates were 40% in mechanically ventilated
cancer patients who survived to day 5 and 22% in all cancer
patients. In this study, Lecuyer et al (190) recommended that
an ICU admission trial be given to all cancer patients for whom
life-extending therapy is available and who are not bedridden,
with full-code status followed by reassessment on day 6.
In a study to validate the SOFA score in 6,645 critically ill
cancer patients, Crdenas-Turanzas et al (191) reported overall
ICU and in-hospital mortality rates of 11% and 17%, respectively. Medical patients (2,609 patients, including hematological patients) had higher ICU and in-hospital mortality rates
(25% and 37%, respectively) than surgical patients (4,036
patients) (2% and 4%). These results were confirmed by
Azoulay et al (192) in another prospective, multicenter study
of 1,011 critically ill patients with hematologic malignancies in
France and Belgium. The hospital, 90-day, and 1-year mortality rates were 39%, 48%, and 57%, respectively (192). Similar
short-term survival was noted in these two studies (hospital
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survival rates, 63% and 61%, respectively) (191, 192). Horster


et al (193) reported overall ICU mortality of 46% among
patients with hematological malignancies. Bos et al (194) have
recently reported low elective cancer surgery mortality rates,
with ICU and hospital mortalities of 1% and 5%, respectively,
and in-hospital mortality of 17% among cancer patients with
unplanned ICU admissions (195). Despite that many other
recent studies corroborate the above survival trends, the comparison of overall mortality or survival rates between studies
can be misleading because of factors such as differences in
mortality among subgroups (medical vs surgical), volumes of
specific cancer groups (i.e., hematological patients), age distribution, differences in severity of illness, and variations in
admission criteria.
In a nationwide study of 12,180 patients admitted to
Finnish ICUs, Niskanen et al (196) showed that short-term
survival was similar between cancer and noncancer patients
and depended on the severity of illness; the survival of cancer and trauma patients with APACHE II scores greater than
24 was also similar. Patients admitted after cardiac arrest
had the highest mortality (79%). Likewise, the mortality
rates of burn patients with more than a 70% burn area are
extremely high if they have associated thrombocytopenia
(67% mortality at 60 d) or sepsis (76% mortality at 60 d).
Based on newer mortality prediction models, burn patients
with 50% full-thickness surface area burns and APACHE
III-j scores of 120 have a predicted mortality rate between
40% and 60% (197). In contrast, patients with breast cancer
metastatic to the liver have a 5-year survival rate of 50%
(198). The above-cited studies suggest that ICU access of
cancer patients should be decided on the basis of their severity of illness and long-term prognosis, which is rapidly and
continuously changing (as in the case of metastatic breast
cancer outcomes), rather than on the basis of the presence
of a malignancy or metastasis.
Triage in Epidemics
Recommendations:

We suggest not using scoring systems alone to determine


level of care or removal from higher levels of care because
these are not accurate in predicting individual mortality
(Grade 2C).
We suggest that all hospitals and regional areas develop a
coordinated triage plan for epidemics. The hospital plans
should include both triage and dissemination of patients
throughout the hospital (ungraded).
We suggest that during epidemics, nontraditional settings be considered and utilized for the care of critically ill
patients (ungraded).
We suggest not using routine laboratory studies alone
in determining the nature of illness during an epidemic
(ungraded).

As with many sections of these guidelines, there is a paucity


of literature that relates to triage for epidemics. The current
literature is divided into two main categories.
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The first category describes the importance of each hospital


or region developing and maintaining a generic plan for dealing with epidemics. Each hospital system must have in place a
coordinated disaster plan for mass casualty/epidemic events.
Key individuals must have defined roles and responsibilities.
Pre-event training must include uniform instruction in communication, coordination, and cooperation, both within the
hospital and community/region wide (199).
Hick et al (200) recommended that a surge plan for epidemics be in place at all hospitals. Developing such a plan would
include a working draft that incorporated a feedback cycle with
all involved parties. It was also recommended that following
the development of the initial plan and orientation of staff,
a tabletop exercise, in which the response to an epidemic is
talked through, would be conducted in an attempt to determine the adequacy of the plan. The goal of this exercise would
be to determine the potential to care for critically ill patients
in nontraditional settings in the face of an epidemic threat at
that facility.
The second category of literature encompasses studies of
epidemic triage practices, which are typically retrospective and
observational in nature. The majority of the literature on triage during specific epidemics that was published during the
reviewed time frame (19982013) focused on respiratory illness such as influenzaspecifically H1N1 and severe acute
respiratory syndrome (SARS). Interestingly, even though the
majority of the period reviewed was after September 2001, no
literature was found on other types of infectious epidemics,
such as potential terrorist release of smallpox.
Barr et al (201) developed a survey to determine healthcare workers attitudes about their duties and resource utilization during a hypothetical influenza pandemic in the United
Kingdom. On review of the case scenarios, the researchers
noted wide variability in resource allocation, with only 54%
of the respondents choosing the same patient for the last ICU
bed. The majority of hospital staff (79%) felt that professional
healthcare workers would continue to work, and 83% felt that
it would be unprofessional for doctors to leave work (201).
An Italian prospective observational study during the H1N1
influenza epidemic demonstrated that patients with moderate
intermediate disease could be appropriately managed in an
intermediate care unit, not in an ICU. Moderate intermediate
disease was defined as the presence of any of the following: pH
less than 7.35 or greater than 7.45, respiratory rate of greater
than 25 breaths/min, oxygen saturation of less than 94%, heart
rate greater than 110 beats/min, WBC count less than 4,000 L
or greater than 12,000 L, or evidence of organ dysfunction
that required hospitalization. Only 10% of the studied patients
required noninvasive ventilation, 96% were treated with antibacterial agents, and 83% were treated with antivirals. Only 2%
required admission to an ICU. In this population, there were
no deaths (202).
The Pandemic Medical Early Warning Score (PMEWS) was
developed in the United Kingdom to facilitate admission and
discharge decisions. Challen et al (203) validated this scoring
system using community-acquired pneumonia as a surrogate
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illness. This clinical scoring system is intended to identify


patients who need admission to a hospital and to reassure
the worried well. This scoring system evaluates acute physiologic derangements and also incorporates age, comorbidities,
and other social factors, such as being a displaced person. The
authors found that PMEWS was a better predictor for need for
admission (area under the curve 0.944 vs 0.881) and higher
level of care (area under the curve 0.881 vs 0.640) than the
CURB-65, but not as good at predicting mortality (area under
the curve 0.663 vs 0.788).
Guest et al (204) applied the U.K. government-recommended triage process for an influenza pandemic to their ICU
patient population. The investigators discovered that 46% of
their current ICU population would have been denied ICU
care based on the government recommendations. Of the
denied population, 39% survived to hospital discharge. The
conclusion was that the scoring system used by the United
Kingdom was inadequate to determine admission criteria for
a critical care setting. Talmor et al (205) created and validated
a triage scoring system for use during epidemics. The score
was based on five independent variables identified in a cohort
of patients with suspected infection in the ED: age more than
65 years, altered mental status, respiratory rate greater than 30
breaths/min, low oxygen saturation, and a shock index greater
than 1 (heart rate > blood pressure). The validation of this
simple triage decision scoring system in two different cohorts
had an area under the curve greater than 0.7. An Australian
retrospective study evaluated the utility of procalcitonin to
differentiate between viral and bacterial causes of respiratory
tract infections; the authors wanted to determine the utility
of laboratory data to help with the placement of ICU patients
during an epidemic. They concluded that procalcitonin was
neither sensitive nor specific in determining the presence or
absence of influenza and should be used with caution for this
purpose (206).
An interesting phenomenon was noted in Taiwan during
the height of the SARS epidemic: the total volume of patients
seeking emergency care significantly decreased after the news
report of nosocomial transmission of SARS. This decrease was
seen across most principal ED diagnosis types, from cardiovascular disease to trauma. It did not affect the number requiring critical care. Simultaneously, there was an increase in the
volume of patients suffering from respiratory illness and from
suicide attempts via drug overdose, but this increase was not
statistically significant (207).
A retrospective chart review was conducted in Singapore,
an active site during the 2009 H1N1 influenza outbreak. The
review showed that patients who had complaints of breathlessness, were tachycardiac, were hypoxemic by pulse oximetry,
had leukocytosis, or had an elevated protein C or low albumin level on presentation were statistically more likely to have
moderate (needing treatment in a hospital ward) to severe disease (needing treatment in a high-dependency unit or ICU)
than mild disease. Of the patients who required ICU admission, 94% did so within the first 24 hours of presentation to
the hospital (208).
Critical Care Medicine

Khan et al (209) performed a retrospective review using the


SOFA score to evaluate patients admitted to their ICU with
H1N1 influenza. They discovered that SOFA is not a valid
scoring system to predict outcome in these patients. For five
patients, the SOFA scores predicted that they would have had
support withdrawn at 48 hours, yet all patients in the cohort
survived. It appears that respiratory failure requiring ventilatory support in patients with H1N1 influenza requires a longer
duration of support but still can result in good outcomes. A
task force reviewing the allocation of resources in an influenza
epidemic or mass critical care events suggests the use of the
SOFA score in appropriate patients (130). Inclusion criteria
include the need for mechanical ventilation and vasopressors;
exclusion criteria consider little likelihood of survival, such as
a SOFA score-predicted mortality equal or greater than 80%.
A SOFA score of greater than 11 has also been proposed to
exclude patients from critical care resources during influenza
epidemics (131). Christian et al (131) created a prioritization
tool based on the SOFA score and divided patients into four
groups designated by colors; they also established inclusion
and more detailed exclusion criteria. Any of the exclusion criteria or a SOFA score greater than 11 (Blue Category) on the
initial assessment or at the subsequent evaluation stages at 48
hours and 120 hours triages patients to medical management
with or without palliative care and terminates critical care;
a SOFA score of less than or equal to 7 or single-organ failure (Red Category) places patients in the highest priority; a
SOFA score of 811 (Yellow Category) places patients in the
intermediate priority; and no significant organ failure (Green
Category) places patients on reassessment or defer priority.
However, in a retrospective cohort study, Shahpori et al (210)
found that their hospital mortality rate exceeded 90% only for
patients with SOFA scores of greater than 20; H1N1 patients
who had SOFA scores of greater than 11 had a mortality rate
of only 31%. Although the SOFA score seems to be the most
widely accepted tool assisting triage prioritization of patients
to the ICU, there is insufficient evidence to support its use in
clinical decision-making for individuals.
Triage in Other Types of MCIs
Recommendations:

We suggest that the activation of the hospital disaster plan


and a coordinated response of the entire healthcare team
(e.g., physicians, nursing staff, environmental staff, and
administrators) follow the announcement of a MCI. The
team should ensure that their institution and critical areas
(ED, operating room, and ICU) are ready for the rapid and
efficient transition from normal to emergency operations
and increase their capacity to accommodate a larger volume
of critically ill patients (ungraded).
We suggest that the disaster response teams identify all
patients in need of ICU care and those already hospitalized
who could be discharged, and then triage and transfer the
incoming patients to the most appropriate setting as soon as
possible (ungraded).
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Because we cannot address this subject in its entirety due


to its complexity and scope, we suggest that the readers needing guidance beyond this work refer to more comprehensive
guides. For example, the comprehensive program developed
by a multidisciplinary team of experts sponsored by SCCM,
Fundamental Disaster Management, provides a practical
approach for the management of disasters and the basis for
medical response in multiple scenarios ranging from MCIs to
natural disasters (211). In addition, the Task Force for Mass
Critical Care Working Group, under the umbrella of the
Critical Care Collaborative Initiative, has made recommendations to guide the allocation of critical care resources in situations such as those described above (130); recently, on behalf
of the American College of Chest Physicians, the group published a Consensus Statement about the care of critically ill and
injured patients during pandemics and disasters (212).
Given the nature of such events, there have been no randomized controlled trial studies of MCIs. Most of the relevant
literature is observational or descriptive in nature. One such
publication describes the experience in the Netherlands of the
Major Incident Hospital that it opened in 1991. This facility
is designed to provide immediate emergency care in a largescale capacity for disasters and mass casualty events. It is also
designed for quarantine situations. The facility has designated
areas for triage, emergency care, OR, radiology, and varying levels of care from low level to ICU. With set protocols,
the facility can be opened and functional in 15 minutes. In
a 19-year period, the Major Incident Hospital was deployed
34 times (213).
MCIs affect not only the disaster victims but also routine
patients who are not directly affected by the event. A retrospective review of a hospital system after a mass casualty event that
filled the hospital to greater than 105% capacity showed spillover effect to the noncasualty patients as well (214). All patients
experienced an increased LOS and increased charges compared with patients cared for during nonmass casualty times.
The authors suggested that the longer hospitalization was
caused by limited resources of personnel, space, and material.
A Canadian regional trauma center conducted a retrospective
review examining MCIs occurring over a 12-month period.
An MCI was defined as treating and admitting at least three
trauma patients in a maximum time of 3 hours. Ten percent of
the centers patients received care during an MCI. Compared
with the rest of the centers patients, the MCI patients did have
a statistically longer hospital LOS, time to first surgical procedure, time to emergent laparotomy, and ED LOS. However,
there was no overall increase in hospital mortality after admission (215).
Certain injury patterns may help identify injury severity
and need for ICU care. A prospective database was collected
for patients suffering injury after attacks from suicide bombers. Independent predictors of admission to the ICU were the
presence of facial fractures, peripheral vascular injury, skull
fractures, and injury to greater than four body parts (216).
The authors suggested that these types of injuries be used as
surrogate markers for severe injury and advocated prompt
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admission of such patients to the ICU. Clinicians at Rhode


Island Hospital shared their experience caring for multiple
casualties from a fire caused by a presumed malfunction of
pyrotechnics during a concert. This type of MCI is different
from others in that many victims not only had significant
burns that needed immediate and prolonged care but also suffered from inhalational injuries that required extensive ICU
and pulmonary care (217).
Many factors can affect the outcome and care of patients
during an MCI. An MCI from a bombing in 1998 in Northern
Ireland demonstrated challenges in communication. Landlines
were damaged, and mobile towers were overloaded; local EMS
members were able to communicate only by radio. There
were challenges in tracking patients. An information board
was utilized, but patients still were transferred to beds scattered around the hospital and temporarily forgotten (218).
The unpredictable nature of MCIs makes them challenging to
prepare for. In urban bombings, most patients arrive at hospital facilities within 30 minutes of the initial event (219). The
Israeli medical system has perfected, and documented, the
ability to be prepared and function at a high level of care literally at a moments notice (220). It has been shown that after
terrorist-related MCIs in Israel, injuries that result in an Injury
Severity Score greater than 16 are seen more frequently (in
about 30% of patients) than after nonterror events (20% of
patients) (221). About 26% of terror victims are admitted to
the ICU for at least 24 hours. A difference has also been shown
between mechanism of injury, with a greater amount and
severity of injuries for explosions than for gunshot wounds.
Those injured by explosion and by gunshot had about the same
rates of admission to an ICU, 26%, but victims of explosions
had a significantly longer LOS in the ICU. The authors stratified patients by the number of body regions injured; those with
only one injured region had about a 9% admission rate to the
ICU, whereas those with greater than two injured regions had
a 71% ICU admission rate (222).
Data from an Israeli trauma registry study showed that
terrorism victims who suffer burns are much more likely to
have other associated injuries (87% vs 10%) and be admitted
to an ICU (50% vs 12%) than burned nonterrorism victims
(223). The burned terrorism victims had a similar mortality
rate to the nonburned terrorism victims (6% vs 7%), which
was higher than that of burned nonterrorism patients (3%). In
another study in Israel, there was no difference in rates of ICU
admission for victims of gunshot wounds occurring during an
MCI vs not. The likelihood of death from gunshot wounds was
2.7 times higher (95% CI 1.097.02) if they occurred during
an MCI than if they did not (224). Another study comparing
blast-wounded terrorism victims to gunshot wound victims
showed that blast-wounded victims were more likely to have
an Injury Severity Score greater than 16 and be admitted to the
ICU; the mortality rate and LOS were also significantly higher
in the blast-wounded victims (225).
Avidan et al (226) performed a two-decade retrospective
review of their trauma patients who were victims of terrorist bombing attacks. The focus of the review was patients who
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suffered from blast lung injury. Terrorist bombing attacks that


occurred in closed spaces, such as a bus or caf, were more likely
to cause blast lung injury. Blast lung injury was a significant cause
of on-the-scene death of victims. This center admitted all patients
with blast lung injury to the ICU. Patients who developed blast
lung injury did so within the first few hours after injury. Those
who required mechanical ventilation did so within the first
2 hours after injury. Mechanical ventilation with the lowest levels of positive end-expository pressure to maintain oxygenation
and limited IV fluid to reduce lung edema were the mainstays of
therapy. This cohort of patients had a 96% survival rate.
ICU availability is one of the major concerns during initial
deployment of an MCI plan as ICU bed demand is the second only to ED demand in the typical MCI. About one-third
of patients are admitted to the ICU, many directly from the
ED. High staffing levels for the ED, OR, and ICU are required
during an MCI. Einav et al (227) recommend that the postanesthesia care unit also be used as an overflow ICU. The initial
48 hours of care is just the initial step on a potentially long road
to recovery for the significantly injured victim. One report
showed that terrorism victims who were hospitalized and
survived their initial injuries had almost a 50% readmission
rate (228), typically for complications from the initial injury
or reconstructive surgery. Terrorism victims who were initially
cared for in the ICU had a greater than 40% readmission rate
in the first 3 months after discharge.
Shamir et al (229) have published an informative review
for ICU personnel. Their work covers the typical progression of events of an MCI, the potential number of expected
patients, and the types of injuries to anticipate in the ICU.
These authors have also described the importance of the chain
of command and perioperative care provided through what
they call forward deployment of anesthesiologists. Instead of
leaving anesthesiologists in the operating room, their hospital
MCI response system mobilizes anesthesiologists outside the
operating room to facilitate the care of victims throughout the
institution, from the moment of arrival at the ED to the transportation to CT scanners, angiography suite, operating room,
post-anesthesia care unit, and ICU (219). This system not only
facilitates patient flow but also provides expert and continuous
intensive care from hospital arrival to the operating room (in
their study, an average of 2hr after arrival) and ICU admission
(several hours later) (219).
Pulmonary blast injury is associated with suicide bombings, as are penetrating head injury, skull fractures, and burns.
Patients suffering from blast lung injury can experience rapid
progression that may be fatal. It is recommended that patients
at risk be quickly transported to the ICU. Another key point is
that access to the ICU should not be a limiting factor during
these events. Administration and staff need to work expeditiously to clear ICU beds so that they can readily accept victims
who need ongoing resuscitation. However, this process should
be preplanned and part of the critical care surge operational
arrangements contained in every hospital disaster response
plan, a requirement of the Joint Commission in the United
States (230).
Critical Care Medicine

Triage in Natural Disasters


Recommendation:

We suggest that in areas at risk, ICUs be prepared to deal


with the victims of not only external disasters but also internal disasters, including collapse of surrounding services in
large-scale disasters such as an earthquake, tsunami, or
major tornado. Every ICU should have general disaster and
evacuation plans such as those required by the Joint Commission Standards in the United States (ungraded).

Events such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis,


floods, hurricanes, and tornados can devastate entire healthcare systems. In the past decade, we have seen a record number
of severe disasters in the continental United States and around
the world. As a matter of fact, since 1960, the numbers of disasters and people affected have increased exponentially, suggesting that we will be exposed to these events more frequently
(231). Because we cannot stop disasters, it is important to
recognize our role and capabilities for preventing, containing,
and/or mitigating the impact of these catastrophic events on
the population at risk.
Hospitals, and in particular ICUs, are vulnerable during
natural disasters. Relatively minor events such as a tropical
storm could lead to the closing of a complete healthcare system (171). During tropical storm Allison in 2001, at a major
teaching and trauma center in the heart of Houston, a power
outage and generator failure rendered useless all the services
and devices that depended on electricity (e.g., elevators, water
and infusion pumps, ventilators, dialysis machines, medication stations, electronic records, labs, telephones, and drugs).
All aspects of medical care and basic needs were affected. In the
case of a major hurricane such as Katrina in 2005, the devastation extended not only to the medical center, as happened in
Houston, but also to the entire city of New Orleans (232).
Some of the key lessons learned from recent floods and hurricanes include the importance of

Adequate leadership before, during, and after a disaster (e.g.,


a clear leader, no confusion about who is in charge, clearly
defined roles of national agencies [in large-scale disasters]).
Appropriate coordination of the human response (at small
and large scales, such as regional hospital coordinating
groups).
Preservation of essential critical services (e.g., electricity,
water supplies).
Appropriate planning and equipment for vertical evacuation from tall hospital buildings when elevators are not
working (e.g., during loss of electrical power).
Continuity of care with an adequate patient-logging system
and solutions for enhancing the portability of health records
(e.g., in sharp contrast to systems at neighboring hospitals,
the Veterans Administration electronic health records performed well during the New Orleans evacuation).
Adequate communication (internal and external), considering the potential and reported failure of telephone
networks.
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Availability of adequate ventilation resources (e.g., ventilators, oxygen).


Appropriate use of available military resources (e.g., helping with helicopter evacuations and medical personnel).
Attention to potential dangers to the security of medical
personnel (171, 232, 233).

In small-scale emergencies such as tropical storm Allison,


the surrounding still-standing healthcare systems can provide
the necessary support to maintain services to the patients and
residents affected. In larger scale events such as Hurricane
Katrina, the nearby facilities were affected, leading to total collapse of the system. Healthcare organizational leaders should
ensure that their emergency plans have backup systems at the
local, regional, and national levels.
Large-scale disasters like earthquakes can lead to additional
catastrophic events. In 2011, the Great East Japan Earthquake
and subsequent tsunami devastated the information infrastructure of the region affected and damaged the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear power plant, triggering the isolation of a 30-km
zone (234). In contrast to U.S. storms, evacuation of patients
was hindered by fear of radioactive material contamination in
the vicinity of the reactor or outside the 30-km radius because
the official priority was the evacuation zone (234). The medical teams that came to assist did not have any information on
the conditions and actual needs of the area. A Nippon Medical
School team reported that during their medical rounds in the
Kesennuma City evacuation shelters, many basic needs were
lacking (e.g., no water or food) (235); however, some services such as blood banks were not overwhelmed and able
to respond effectively (236). Evacuations in these conditions
are more complex and require long-distance trips with triage
on arrival at the destination ICU; in the Richter magnitude
scale 9 earthquake that affected Southeast Asia in 2004, some
European tourists were transferred to German ICUs via medevac aircraft (237).
The common picture that emerges from the review of the
literature on natural disasters caused by storms or associated floods is one of ICU/hospital evacuation after extensive
destruction of the healthcare infrastructure. Triage is mainly
performed for evacuation from the area of disaster. In the case
of disasters caused by Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale 3 tornados,
severely injured patients in the rural community were transferred from local hospitals by helicopters to level I trauma centers with a broad spectrum of bodily injuries, from fractures to
thoracic crush, abdominal, or head injuries (238). In an EF4
mass casualty event that affected Georgia and Tennessee in 2011,
104 patients were evacuated with injuries, 28 admitted to the
hospital, and 11 to the ICU. The ICU LOS was 10.911.8 days,
but all survived, with three patients (11%) transferred to skilled
nursing facilities (239). In cases of larger-EF-scale tornados,
entire communities and their healthcare facilities are totally
destroyed, and there is a need for long-distance transportation.
Ablah et al (240) reported a critical mortality (mortality rate
of the critically ill survivors) of about 18% in the EF5 tornado
that affected Greensburg, Kansas, in 2007. Frykberg reported a
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slightly lower critical mortality (13%) in a review of 10 terrorist bombing incidents (135).
As described above, most healthcare centers are devastated
during these types of events, and evacuation is the most likely
outcome of the incident. Very few examples of successful medical responses to major incidents, such as the citywide devastation following Hurricane Katrina, have been documented.
The complexity of the massive response by the entire Houston
healthcare system and the recommendations of some of the
teams involved are worth using to guide future planning and
responses to MCIs (171, 241, 242).
Future Directions and Research
There is a need for more objective and validated tools for accurate triage and reduction of variability among ICU admission
practitioners. Further work using a prospective approach is
needed to establish which parameters have the highest predictive validity for benefit from ICU care. Given the heavy
financial burden and potential dangers associated with interhospital transfers, more research is needed to determine the
actual impact of transfers to a higher level of care from one
institution to another. There is a need for triage models that
would work during normal operations and catastrophic situations. Efforts must continue to increase critical care resources
at lower costs and to develop more efficient systems to respond
to the needs of the population adequately in order to minimize
rationing.

ICU DISCHARGE
Recommendations:

We suggest that every ICU stipulate specific discharge criteria in its ADT policy (ungraded).
We suggest that it is appropriate to discharge a patient from
the ICU to a lower acuity area when a patients physiologic
status has stabilized and there no longer is a need for ICU
monitoring and treatment (ungraded).
We suggest that the discharge parameters be based on ICU
admission criteria, the admitting criteria for the next lower
level of care, institutional availability of these resources,
patient prognosis, physiologic stability, and ongoing active
interventions (ungraded).
We suggest that, to improve resource utilization, discharge
from the ICU is appropriate despite a deteriorated patients
physiological status if active interventions are no longer
planned (ungraded).
We suggest refraining from transferring patients to lower
acuity care areas based solely on severity-of-illness scores
(ungraded). General and specific severity-of-illness scoring
systems can identify patient populations at higher risk of
clinical deterioration after ICU discharge. However, their
value for assessing the readiness for transfer of individual
patients to lower acuity care has not been evaluated.

Patients admitted to the ICU must be reevaluated continuously to identify those who no longer require ICU care. Ideally,
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transfer from the ICU occurs when the patient no longer meets
ICU admission criteria and meets admitting criteria for a lower
level of care. The decision is made difficult by the absence of
clear and objective metrics to indicate which patients will continue to benefit from critical care. Marked heterogeneity exists
in critical care discharge practices, often influenced by institutional factors (243). This observation is confirmed in the daily
practices among the members of the Task Force.
Investigations of ICU discharge processes were divided into
four major categories: 1) timing of discharge, both day versus night and weekday versus weekend; 2) the effectiveness of
discharge to specialty facilities such as step-down units and
LTACHs; 3) the causes and risk factors for readmission to the
ICU; and 4) ICU outflow limitations.

weekend discharge (257) and some for increased risk following weekday discharge (256). These differential results may be
due to institutional factors; the causes have not been validated.
If higher acuity patients are discharged from the ICU during
the week due to bed capacity issues but kept in the ICU on the
weekends when bed demand is not as high, increased risk of
readmission for weekday discharges could be expected because
of the severity of illness. On the other hand, if higher acuity
patients are discharged from the ICU on the weekends or less
coverage is available during the weekends, increased risk of
readmission for weekend discharges could be expected. Premature discharge may be affected by increased strain on the
ICU capacity, including new admissions, high acuity, and high
unit census (258).

Timing of Discharge From ICU


Day Versus Night Discharge.
Recommendation:

Discharge Strategies to Reduce ICU LOS


Recommendation:

We suggest avoiding discharge from ICU after hours


(night shift, after 7 pm in institutions with 12-hr shifts)
(grade 2C). In addition, best practice would seek to optimize evening and night coverage and services (ungraded).

We suggest discharging patients at high risk for mortality


and readmission (high severity of illness, multiple comorbidities, physiologic instability, and ongoing organ support)
to a step-down unit or LTACH as opposed to the regular
ward (grade 2C).

The effect of time of discharge from the ICU has been


investigated both in terms of mortality and readmission rates.
Discharge in the evening or night hours is an independent risk
factor for increased mortality (244250) and readmission (245,
247, 248, 251). Reports from conference proceedings confirm
this relationship (252255). The findings have been consistent
in diverse large samples (1,87076,690 patients) in multiple
countries, supporting generalizability. However, a few studies
have found no relationship between the discharge time of day
and risk of readmission (252, 256) or between the discharge
time of day and mortality (245, 254).
The reason for the increased mortality noted in the latedischarge population is not clear. The increased risk may be
related to decreased coverage and services available after hours.
In fact, the time defined as evening or night varies across studies based on the institutional definition of after hours (e.g.,
after hours would start after 7 pm in the case of 12-hr nursing shift changes). Another possible explanation for the higher
mortality rate is ICU bed capacity and the requirement for triage to accommodate incoming emergencies. The patients discharged from ICU in the evening or night, therefore, may be of
higher acuity than those discharged during the day. Studies to
date do not differentiate between patients who are discharged
after hours due to delayed availability of the non-ICU beds
(ICU outflow limitation), patients triaged earlier in the day as
ready for discharge if needed, and patients discharged from
the ICU only because patients with a higher acuity emergency
need to be admitted.
Weekday Versus Weekend Discharge. Weekend discharge
from the ICU has not been found to be associated with
increased mortality (247, 256, 257). Reports on the relationship between day of discharge and risk for readmission
have varied, with some evidence for increased risk following

The organization of patient care areas within the institution influences patient readiness for discharge from the ICU.
Quality and quantity of care on the general ward (floor) may
be inadequate to meet the needs of some patients otherwise
meeting criteria for ICU discharge. Utilization of specialized
care facilities such as step-down units within the hospital or
discharge to an LTACH can decrease LOS in the ICU while still
providing safe care for the patient.
Step-Down Units. Step-down units are variously referred
to as high-dependency units, intermediate care units, or
transitional care units. The existence and capabilities of such
units vary greatly among institutions. Perhaps because of this,
little formal investigation has been undertaken to evaluate
outcomes. Descriptions of the types of patients discharged to
step-down units include those with ongoing neurologic, circulatory, or respiratory conditions, particularly those with high
severity-of-illness scores (259, 260).
Evaluation of outcomes comparing care in these units to
care in the ICU is incomplete. There is some evidence for success with weaning from mechanical ventilation (261) and for
decreasing ICU bed utilization without increasing mortality or
readmissions (262). The paucity of data here may not reflect
ineffectiveness of the step-down unit but rather a large gap in
research to validate effectiveness.
Long-Term Acute-Care Hospitals. LTACHs are hospitals
that provide continuing care expected to be needed for at least
25 days after discharge from an acute-care hospital. LTACHs
may provide many ICU-level services, including vasoactive
medications and mechanical ventilation, although these vary
at individual facilities. Attempts have been made to develop
a scoring system to determine early in the ICU stay whether
an individual patient will qualify for discharge to an LTACH
(263). Such a discharge can significantly decrease both ICU

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and hospital LOS while positioning the patient to receive continuing effective care.
There are wide variations in LTACH use, more than can
be accounted for by the location and availability of facilities.
Utilization occurs more often with discharge from larger hospitals, for-profit hospitals, and academic teaching institutions,
and when the LTACH is located within the acute-care hospital (264). Discharge to an LTACH is more frequent when the
patient has commercial insurance, rather than Medicaid (265)
because Medicaid does not recognize LTACHs for payment.
Outcomes evaluation has primarily focused on the success in
weaning from mechanical ventilation (266, 267). However, the
prevalence of chronic critical illness is expected to increase with
the aging of the population; inability to the transfer of chronic
ICU patients still requiring ventilatory support to LTACHs or
ventilated hospice beds could become a serious discharge outflow limitation (268).
Readmission to ICU
Recommendation:

We suggest that a standardized process for discharge from


the ICU be followed; both oral and written formats for the
report may reduce readmission rate (ungraded).

Readmission to the ICU after initial discharge is most


often due to respiratory failure; cardiovascular failure, sepsis,
and neurologic issues (251, 256, 269274). Prevention of the
need for readmission is vital, as readmission adds to patient
risk. Readmission to the ICU significantly increases mortality
beyond that predicted by patient acuity alone (256, 273275).
However, adjusting for the effect of case mix on the mortality
rate may moderate or negate the correlation between readmission and poorer outcomes, as demonstrated by Kramer
et al (276).
Readmission rates are a frequently measured quality criterion. However, the time frame considered varies among studies, limiting comparison of results. One large study, analyzing
data for 214,692 critically ill patients from the 2001 to the 2008
Project IMPACT database, found the optimal interval to evaluate to be two full calendar days (rather than 48hr) although
uncertainty remained about the validity of the data as a measure of quality (277).
Knowledge of which patients are at risk for readmission to
the ICU would enable the ICU team to either postpone discharge or identify the patients as high risk during transfer to
the accepting providers. General severity-of-illness scoring
systems such as APACHE (II and III), SAPS II, SOFA, and the
Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System have been shown to
correlate with mortality after discharge from the ICU (251,
269, 270, 272275, 278, 279). In addition, multiple factors have
been independently associated with unplanned readmission to
the ICU, including age, comorbidities, admission source other
than planned surgery, and ongoing requirements for organ
support (251, 256, 271, 272, 274, 275, 280285).
There is some evidence that the risk of readmission is
greater when patients are discharged from the ICU to admit
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new patients to the ICU during periods of high demand.


Although there are not a great number of studies to support this, one study documented a highly significant increase
in risk of ICU readmissions on days when there were more
than nine patients admitted to a neurosciences unit than days
with less than eight admissions (OR, 2.43; 95% CI, 1.394.26)
(286). Another study of 200,730 patients demonstrated that
although readmission rate increased relative to ICU capacity
strain, there was no association with increased odds of death,
reduced odds of being discharged to home, or increased hospital LOS (258). Several predictive models have been developed, with initial significant results but variable results upon
attempted validation in other ICU populations (251, 280,
287293).
Lower nursing staffing levels in the post-ICU unit are associated with an increased rate of ICU readmission. Interestingly,
in non-ICU patients with the highest levels of severity of illness, this association is not apparent (294). Similarly, higher
nursing workload on the day of ICU discharge is associated
with decreased levels of readmission (295). Although limited
by the number of studies, the findings suggest that the most
severely ill patients have their needs met. However, this may be
at the expense of less severely ill patients. In a qualitative study,
nurses identified the following factors as associated with readmission to the ICU: premature discharge from ICU, delayed
medical care at the ward level, heavy nursing workloads, lack
of adequately qualified staff, and clinically challenging patients
(296). Thematically, these factors are in agreement with the
quantitative findings discussed earlier.
Interventions to decrease the prevalence of readmissions
to the ICU may occur within institutions as performance
improvement projects, but published research is rare. At an
urban teaching hospital, institution of a discharge process
that included a transfer phone call, charted care summary,
and discharge physical re-examination by the discharging
provider resulted in a decrease in readmission rate from
41% to 10%. Of those readmitted cases, 30% were found to
be noncompliant with the new processes (297). In another
study, the institution of ICU discharge phone reports by the
ICU physician or nurse practitioner, nurse, and respiratory
therapist also resulted in a significant decrease in readmissions (298). Although they represent only two studies, these
findings reinforce that we can improve patient outcomes after
discharge from ICU.
ICU Outflow Limitations
Although outflow limitations and bottlenecks produced in
the ICU discharge process are common in daily practice, this
problem has not received enough attention in the past. Levin
et al (299) have reported that among 856 attempts to discharge
703 patients over a period of 16 months, 18% (153 attempts) of
the discharges could not be completed within 24 hours. Fortysix percent of the failures to discharge were associated with
lack of beds on the floors or lack of agreement with the accepting teams outside the ICU. In addition, a simulation model
identified the ICU as the first potential bottleneck in surge
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capacity during disasters (300). No additional relevant studies


were identified.
Future Directions and Research
We believe that there is need for

Further development and validation of predictive models


(e.g., mortality and ICU readmission).
Evaluation of outcomes in both step-down units and
LTACHs in comparison with continued ICU care.
Research in the area of outflow limitations and the impact
of high hospital bed occupancy rates on ICU utilization and
outcomes.
Further intervention studies on reducing rates of readmission to the ICU, evaluating transfer location, staffing levels,
and handoff report components.

USE OF OUTREACH PROGRAMS TO


SUPPLEMENT ICU CARE
Unplanned (unexpected) transfers to the ICU are often preceded by physiologic instability (301). Yet often, recognition of
critical illness states that require ICU admission is delayed or
inadequate (302). RRSs have been used by some institutions
to identify patients who need or would benefit from early ICU
admission and treatment, as well as to prevent unnecessary
ICU admissions (45, 303307).
RRS Intervention Prior to ICU Admission
Recommendation:

We suggest that RRSs be utilized for early review of acutely


ill non-ICU patients to identify patients who need or would
benefit from ICU admission and treatment and to prevent
unnecessary ICU admissions (grade 2C).

A number of single-center studies demonstrate significant


differences in mortality rates with the use of RRSs for both
adult and PICU patients (308310), including decreases in
hospital-wide mortality, out-of-ICU mortality, and out-ofICU cardiac arrest codes (311). In a synthesis review of the
outcomes for RRSs of 26 before-and-after studies and a metaanalysis of 18 studies, RRSs were associated with reduced
rates of cardiorespiratory arrest outside the ICU and reduced
mortality (312). Several additional systematic reviews and
meta-analyses on the effects of RRSs on clinical outcomes
have associated implementation of an RRS with a reduction
in the rate of cardiopulmonary arrest outside the ICU (up to
34%; RR, 0.66; 95% CI, 0.540.80), but not with lower hospital mortality rates (RR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.851.09) (313). In
children, implementation of an RRS correlated with reduced
rates of cardiopulmonary arrest outside the ICU (up to 38%)
and a reduction in hospital mortality rates (up to 21%) (RR,
0.79; 95% CI, 0.6398) (313). A meta-analysis of 13 studies
one cluster randomized controlled trial, one interrupted time
series, and 11 before-and-after studiesidentified no effect
on clinical outcomes in the randomized controlled trial but a
Critical Care Medicine

reduction in inpatient mortality (RR, 0.82; 95% CI, 0.740.91)


and cardiac arrest (RR, 0.73; 95% CI, 0.650.83) in the other
studies (314). However, some of the studies were considered to
be of poor methodological quality and control hospitals in the
randomized controlled trial reported reductions in mortality
and cardiac arrest rates comparable with those in the beforeand-after studies (314). Similarly, a systematic review of eight
studies on RRSs found weak evidence that RRSs are associated with a reduction in hospital mortality (pooled RR, 0.76
[95% CI, 0.391.48] between two randomized studies and 0.87
[95% CI, 0.731.04] among five observational studies). RRSs
were associated with a decreased cardiac arrest rate (the pooled
RR was 0.94 [95% CI, 0.791.13] in a single randomized study
and 0.70 [95% CI, 0.560.92] in four observational studies),
but limitations in the quality of the studies, the wide CIs, and
the presence of heterogeneity limited the ability to conclude
that RRSs are effective interventions (315).
The Medical Emergency Response, Intervention and Therapy
(MERIT) trial, a large cluster-randomized controlled trial involving 23 hospitals in Australia, attempted to study the effects of an
RRS during a study period of 6 months after RRS activation.
The study found no differences in the composite outcome of
cardiac arrest, unexpected death, or unplanned admission to the
ICU between the control hospitals and the RRS hospitals (5.86
vs 5.31 per 1,000 admissions, respectively; p = 0.640), nor in the
individual secondary outcomes: cardiac arrests (1.64 [control
hospitals] vs 1.31 [RRS hospitals]; p = 0.736), unplanned ICU
admissions (4.68 vs 4.19; p = 0.599), and unexpected deaths
(1.18 vs 1.06; p = 0.752) (316).
Chen et al (317), in a study analyzing 11,242 serious adverse
events and 3,700 emergency team calls, showed that for every
10% increase in the proportion of early emergency team calls,
the number of unexpected cardiac arrests decreased by 2 per
10,000 hospital admissions (95% CI, 2.6 to 1.4). The investigators also found a reduction in overall cardiac arrests of 2.21
per 10,000 hospital admissions (95% CI, 2.9 to 1.6) and a
reduction in unexpected deaths of 0.94 per 10,000 admissions
(95% CI, 1.4 to 0.5). No significant relationships were found
for unplanned ICU admissions or for the aggregate of unexpected cardiac arrests, unplanned ICU admissions, and unexpected deaths. The results demonstrated that as the proportion
of early emergency team calls increases, the rate of cardiac
arrests and unexpected deaths decreases. This inverse relationship provides support for early review of acutely ill non-ICU
patients by an RRS.
Further review of the MERIT study identified that across
the 12 intervention hospitals, a median of 86% of RRS activations were not related to a cardiac arrest or death. In addition, RRS utilization varied significantly across the 12 hospitals
(p = 0.002) and was significantly associated with knowledge
of the activation criteria (p = 0.048), understanding of the
purpose of the RRS (p = 0.01), and an overall positive attitude toward the RRS (p = 0.003). Overall, measures related to
the process of implementation of the RRS were significantly
associated with the level of its use (318). It has been cited that
the evidence in support of an RRS or equivalent system is not
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straightforward, as issues such as education, resources, and


communication are vital to implementation success (319).
Physiological track-and-trigger warning systems, which
seek to identify patients outside critical care areas who are at
risk of deterioration, were studied in a systematic review and
evaluation of 15 studies, including a cohort study of data from
31 acute-care hospitals in England and Wales. A number of
study limitations, including little evidence of reliability, validity, and utility and insufficient data to identify the best type
of warning system, precluded comparisons between systems
or the ability to establish the best track-and-trigger system
(320). The authors highlight that because of the lack of rigorous testing and poor sensitivity in the evaluation of the available data, attributed in part to rapidly deteriorating patients
and infrequent and nonstandardized measurement of physiological function, there is not sufficient evidence to support
discontinuing the use of track-and-trigger systems. Rather, the
authors suggest that additional work is needed to validate the
impact of such systems.
During RRS activations, the following factors have been
associated with the need for ICU admission: need for noninvasive ventilation (321), hypoxia as the reason for the RRS
call, and ward staff worried about the patient (322). Several
studies have demonstrated a decrease in unplanned ICU
admissions with the use of an RRS, which has implications
for ICU patients. A single-center study of RRS calls during a
3-year interval identified that the RRS was associated with a
36% reduction in the rate of unplanned transfers to the ICU
following an RRS event (30). Similarly, a single-center pre-/
post-implementation study of an RRS that also utilized routine 48-hour follow-up for patients discharged from the ICU
found that the RRS was associated with a reduction of inhospital cardiac arrests and ICU readmissions. The number of
ICU readmissions was reduced from 112 of 712 (16%) to 56 of
586 (10%) by the third year (p = 0.05) (323). In addition, a single-center study of an RRS over a 1-year period, during which
there were 344 RRS calls, demonstrated a decrease of cardiac
arrests from 7.6 to 3.0 per 1,000 discharges per month. Overall
hospital mortality decreased from 3% to 2%, and unplanned
ICU admissions decreased from 45% to 29% (p < 0.05) (324).
Other studies, however, have not demonstrated a change in
unplanned admissions to the ICU (325).
Failure of clinical bedside staff to activate the RRS has also
been identified as a factor in the overall effectiveness of the
RRS (326, 327). A point prevalence survey focused on identifying the incidence of staff failure to activate the RRS revealed
that while the prevalence of physiological instability in acutecare patients was 4%, nearly half of these patients (42%) did
not receive an appropriate clinical response from staff, despite
the fact that most (69%) met physiologic criteria for activating the RRS (327). Lack of an associated RRS call despite the
presence of documented RRS calling criteria has been termed
RRS afferent limb failure. Of clinical significance, RRS afferent limb failure has been demonstrated to be associated with
unanticipated ICU admissions and higher hospital mortality
rates (328, 329).
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Delay in activating the RRS has been attributed to delays


in the time for nursing staff to call for assistance and where
needed, in the time for physicians to call for higher-level care
(330). Structured interviews with 91 staff members identified
predominantly sociocultural reasons for failure to activate
the RRS. Other studies examining RRS activation delays have
found that the implementation, utilization, and impact of the
RRS are shaped by problems with team cohesion, including
poor communication and team efficiency, lack of resources,
inexperience of staff, lack of availability of ICU beds, and contextual features such as leadership, organizational culture, and
training (331, 332).
ICU Consult Teams in the Wards
Recommendation:

We suggest that ICU consult teams be considered for use


to facilitate transition from the ICU, assist ward staff in
the management of deteriorating patients, facilitate transfer to ICU, and reduce rates of readmission to critical care
(grade 2C).

ICU consult teams have been used to promote follow-up


of patients recently discharged from the ICU and to recognize
deteriorating patients on the ward requiring ICU admission.
The aim of an ICU outreach or consult team is to facilitate
discharges from the ICU, educate ward staff in the management of deteriorating patients, reduce ICU readmission rates,
and facilitate transfer to ICU when merited (333). An extension of the ICU consult team that has demonstrated a significant impact in preventing ICU readmissions is the use
of an ICU liaison or outreach nurse. This model is used in
Australia and in the United Kingdom, where the ICU liaison
nurse emerged as a member of the multidisciplinary team to
assist in the transition of patients from the ICU to the ward
and sometimes to also act as a member of the RRS (334). The
areas of focus of the liaison nurse are providing support for
patients recently discharged from the ICU, support for acutely
ill patients on general wards, formal and information education and skills training for ward staff, and support for families
(335). Although this role is a recognized clinical service role
in Australia, a lack of data on its effect on patient outcomes
after ICU discharge has been cited (336). Overall, research on
the impact of ICU outreach teams has demonstrated a positive effect of such teams on a number of outcomes, including a
decrease in discharge delays (337, 338), prevention of adverse
events (339), a decrease in unplanned ICU admissions/readmissions (333, 340, 341), reduced mortality rates in general
hospital wards (342), and staff evaluations suggesting that care
was more timely, referrals to the ICU were fewer, and ICUs felt
more able to discharge patients to the hospital wards (343).
Several single-center observational studies have found a
positive impact of an ICU liaison nurse service on patient outcomes. The impact of the service in a 36-month before-andafter study on ICU and hospital LOS, mortality rate, and ICU
step-down days found a 13% increase in patient throughput
after the introduction of the ICU liaison nurse service (344).
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Despite trends toward improvement, there was no significant


change in median ICU LOS (2.2 d before compared with 2.1 d
after) or median hospital LOS (12.0 d before compared with
11.5 d after) or in ICU or hospital mortality (ICU, 15% before
compared with 14% after; hospital, 23% before compared with
22% after). However, ICU step-down days were significantly
decreased by 48% (7114.2 d before compared with 37
15.5 d after; p > 0.001). For the patient group readmitted to
the ICU (49 patients before compared with 55 patients after),
there was a 25% decrease in median ICU LOS (4.0 vs 3.0 d)
and a trend toward decreased mortality in both the ICU (18%
before compared with 16% after) and hospital (35% before
compared with 26% after), demonstrating trends toward more
efficient ICU discharge (increased throughput, decreased ICU
step-down days, and ICU readmission LOS) (344).
An integrative review and meta-synthesis of 20 studies
assessing the scope and impact of intensive care liaison and outreach services concluded that the outreach services had a beneficial impact on ICU mortality, hospital mortality, discharge
delay, and rates of adverse events (340). A variety of research
methods were used, however, and it was not possible to conclude unequivocally that the ICU liaison/outreach service had
resulted in improved outcomes. Potential sources of bias that
were identified included selection bias (use of a single site), performance bias (nonstandardized intervention), and no or limited control of confounders (340). Outcomes for nurses in the
form of improved confidence, knowledge, and critical care skills
were identified in qualitative studies but not formally measured. A noteworthy major benefit across the studies, although
not measured quantitatively, was improved communication
pathways between critical care and ward staff (340).
A systematic review of the effectiveness of critical care outreach services conducted in the United Kingdom identified
two randomized controlled trials, 16 uncontrolled before-andafter studies, three quasi-experimental studies, one controlled
before-and-after study, and one post-implementation-only
controlled study (345). The most frequent outcomes measured were mortality rate, cardiac arrest, unplanned critical
care admission from wards, LOS, and critical care readmission
rates. Review of the studies identified improvements in patient
outcomes yet insufficient evidence to demonstrate such outcomes conclusively.
A Cochrane database systematic review of outreach and
early warning systems for the prevention of ICU admission
and of death of critically ill adult patients on general hospital
wards identified two cluster randomized controlled trials, one
randomized at the hospital level (23 hospitals in Australia) and
one at the ward level (16 wards in the United Kingdom) (45).
The primary outcome in the Australian trial (a composite score
including incidence of unexpected cardiac arrests, unexpected
deaths, and unplanned ICU admissions) demonstrated no significant difference between control and outreach team hospitals (adjusted p = 0.640; adjusted OR, 0.98; 95% CI, 0.831.16).
The U.K.-based trial found that outreach reduced in-hospital
mortality (adjusted OR, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.320.85) compared
with the control group. Meta-analysis was not possible due
Critical Care Medicine

to heterogeneity of the interventions, settings, outcomes and


study design and their review of similar works found that
most studies investigating outreach were diverse and had poor
methodological quality (45).
Proactive rounding by the RRS team, which, similar to an ICU
consult team, is aimed at promoting early detection of patients
with clinical deterioration, has not been found to decrease the
ICU readmission rate, ICU LOS, or hospital mortality of patients
discharged from the ICU (346). In contrast, a recent systematic
review and meta-analysis on the use of critical care transition
programs identified a reduced risk of ICU readmission (risk
ratio, 0.87 [95% CI, 0.760.99]; p = 0.03). The risk of readmission was not affected by the presence or absence of an intensivist
or by type of program (e.g., within an outreach team or a nurse
liaison program). Although there was no significant reduction in
hospital mortality, the authors concluded that critical care transition programs appear to reduce the risk of ICU readmission in
patients discharged from ICU to a general unit (347).
Future Directions and Research
Clearly, the lack of evidence on ICU outreach requires further multisite randomized controlled trials to determine its
potential effectiveness. As different models of outreach exist,
additional research that identifies the specific roles of various
types of outreach liaisons and their impact on ICU and ward
patients is needed.
Despite the demonstrated benefit of RRSs, a number of
factors have been identified that can affect the effectiveness of
the RRS, including staff skill set and activation criteria (326,
327). In countries such as Australia and the United Kingdom,
RRS teams commonly include a physician team member, while
in the United States, teams may be composed of critical care
nurses and respiratory therapists who conduct a first-line
assessment and identify the need for physician support. The
effect of these differences in RRS models on outcomes has not
been explored. Regardless of the organizational commitment
to the RRS, clinical staff may act on the basis of local cultural
rules that need to be better understood in order to ensure
appropriate activation of the RRS.
With respect to ICU ADT criteria, research on RRSs has
demonstrated an impact on decreased unplanned ICU readmissions. Additional research on the impact of RRSs is indicated as the studies to date have demonstrated conflicting
results with respect to impact on hospital mortality, cardiac
arrest, and unexpected death.

QUALITY ASSURANCE/IMPROVEMENT AND


METRICS OF ICU ADT PRACTICES
Quest for Appropriate ICU Metrics
Recommendations:

We suggest following the SCCMs guidelines as described


in Critical Care Delivery in the Intensive Care Unit: Defining Clinical Roles and the Best Practice Model (currently
undergoing revision) (ungraded).
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We suggest that every ICU have a written ADT policy, as


an administrative best practice, to guide appropriate patient
placement (ungraded).
We suggest following the metrics identified as indicators of
ADT performance in this framework (Table 5). This information should be collected electronically through the electronic health record, if available (ungraded).

ICUs should be administered following the SCCMs


Critical Care Delivery in the Intensive Care Unit: Defining
Clinical Roles and the Best Practice Model (a revision of
these guidelines is under way) (348). The ADT process should
be monitored, as with any administrative and clinical activity within the healthcare system. Administrative and clinical
best practices include having policies to guide patients flow
throughout their hospital stay. An ICUs ADT policies should
encompass a broad scope of practice, including management
and leadership, multidisciplinary team members, patient types,
processes, and procedures. These policies should also provide
clear directives to prevent conflicts and patient care delays, a
process to deal with conflict and provisions for escalation to
higher levels should be delineated.
In 2002, the Joint Commission developed a set of six
performance measures (ventilator-associated pneumonia
prevention, stress ulcer prophylaxis, deep vein thrombosis
prophylaxis, central line-associated bloodstream infection
prevention, ICU LOS, and hospital mortality rate) for the
ICU, which were later aligned with its ORYX performance
measurement system (349). These measures are specific processes that, if undertaken/addressed, are expected to improve
patient outcomes. The Joint Commission chose the APACHE
version IV scoring system for risk adjustment of the two outcome measures (ICU LOS and hospital mortality); the implementation of these two measures was put on hold in 2005 to
allow alignment with the new requirements established. In
2010, the Commission divided its performance measures into
accountability and nonaccountability measures. The first,
measures that have the greatest impact on patient outcomes,
are identified by four criteria: strong research evidence that
the process will improve patient outcomes, proximity of the
measured process to the outcomes, ability to accurately measure the process, and minimization of unintended adverse
effects caused by the process (350). On the updated list
(2012), only one of the almost 50 accountability measures
was specific to ICU care, ICU venous thromboembolism prophylaxis (351).
We identified three works on ICU quality indicators that
are considered important for the scope of these guidelinesa
systematic review of the literature by Berenholtz et al (352);
the guidelines of the Spanish SCCM and Coronary Units
(SEMICYUC) Multidisciplinary Steering Committees and
Working Teams, titled Quality Indicators in Critically Ill
Patients (353); and a report from the Task Force on Safety and
Quality of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine
(ESICM) (354). These documents all used an evidence-based
approach to summarize the quality indicators identified.
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The first study identified six outcome, six process, four


access, and three complications measures. The access quality
indicator measures were 1) rate of delayed admissions, 2) rate
of delayed discharges, 3) rate of cancelled surgical cases, and
4) number of ED bypass hours (352).
The 188 pages of the SEMICYUC document, published in
2011 after 2 years of revising the original 2005 publication,
proposed 120 quality indicators; among the planning/organization and management quality indicators, they identified:
1) rate of delayed admissions, 2) rate of delayed discharges,
3) rate of premature discharges, 4) rate of suspensions of
scheduled surgeries, 5) regulated exchange of information, and
6) daily rounds by multidisciplinary teams. Among the indicators for perceived quality at discharge from the ICU, they
identified standardized mortality rate and use of an ICU discharge report. Unscheduled readmission was also identified as
an adverse-event quality indicator (353).
For the third publication, the members of the ESICM task
force evaluated 111 potential indicators and came to more than
90% agreement on nine: 1) the need for ICUs to meet the national
standard requirements for resource allocation and reporting, 2)
24-hour availability of a consultant-level intensivist, and for
times that the intensivist was not immediately available, having a provider capable of initiating immediate resuscitation, 3)
an adverse-event reporting system, 4) multidisciplinary rounds,
5) a standardized handover system for discharge, 6) reporting
and analysis of standardized mortality ratios, 7) rate of ICU
readmission at 48 hours, 8) rate of central venous catheterrelated infections, and 9) rate of unplanned extubations (354).
After considering the literature reviewed and discussed
throughout these guidelines, our Task Force has developed a
number of ICU ADT-focused quality indicator metrics, delineated in Table5. The purpose of these metrics is to assist in evaluating the ICU ADT process and making necessary changes to
improve the specific unit/multidisciplinary team performance.
In addition, a few tools developed by the ADT Task Force have
been included to guide practitioners in the process of:
Developing an ICU admission, discharge and triage policy
(Appendix 2, Supplemental Digital Content 2, http://links.
lww.com/CCM/B901).
Allocating critical care resources (Appendix 3, Supplemental
Digital Content 3, http://links.lww.com/CCM/B902).
Prioritizing ICU admission or discharge based on specific
patient needs (Appendix 4, Supplemental Digital Content
4, http://links.lww.com/CCM/B903).
Instructions to create a two-sided pocket card with the tools
in Appendix 3 (Supplemental Digital Content 3, http://
links.lww.com/CCM/B902) and Appendix 4 (Supplemental Digital Content 4, http://links.lww.com/CCM/B903) are
provided in Appendix 5 (Supplemental Digital Content 5,
http://links.lww.com/CCM/B904).
Future Directions and Research
Developing a perfect policy and/or tool to measure acuity is extremely challenging. ADT policy development is a
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Table 5. Quality Assurance/Improvement and Metrics of ICU Admission, Discharge, and


Triage Practices
Monitor and Evaluate

Admission

ICU admissions and the basic administrative information of the patients (e.g., source of referral [such as the
emergency department, ward patients, RRS, or the ICU consult team], number per day, number per month, time of
day or night, outcomes [including standardized mortality rate])
Daily census (e.g., ICU census every 812hr). This allows determining staffing needs (e.g., number of nurses needed
during the day, evening, and night shifts or during the week vs the weekend)
Surgery cancellations (e.g., lack of ICU beds versus hospital beds; track together with hospital/ED bypass)
Admission delays (e.g., source, time between referral and admission, outcomes for these patients)
Physician and nursing staffing and its impact on admission delays and refusals (e.g., correlation of high or low staff
availability/workloads leading to admission delay or denial and the associated referral sources)
Admissions via RRS referral (e.g., number of patients treated by the RRS, admission rate, outcomes)
ICU consults in the wards, if this service is provided (e.g., number of patients, type of patients, admission rate,
outcomes)

Triage

Denied admissions (e.g., source of referral, reason, number per day, number per month, time of day, weekday versus
weekend, outcomes)
Interhospital transfers (e.g., from other EDs, other ICUs)
Cancelled transfers as a result of hospital/ED bypass (e.g., number of cancellations, hours on bypass)
Conflicts (e.g., rate and type of conflicts during referral and admission)

ICU stay

ICU utilization (e.g., LOS, ventilator days)


Ethics and palliative care consults (e.g., rates, outcomes [LOS, ventilator days, end-of-life interventions such as do-notresuscitate orders or comfort care])
Unexpected cardiac arrests (e.g., source of admission, rate, outcomes for correlation with admission delays, use of
prior RRS intervention or ICU consultation in the ward)
Conflicts (e.g., rate and type of conflicts during ICU stay, including admission-discharge-triage and futility
disagreements)
Unexpected deaths (e.g., source of admission, number)

Discharge

Delay in discharges (overutilization) (e.g., avoidable ICU days and reason, such as no beds in the wards)
Time and day of discharge (e.g., discharge at night, weekends)
Patient discharge status (alive or dead) and site of discharge (e.g., ward, intermediate care unit, long-term acute care
hospital, operating room, morgue)
Outcomes of all patients adjusted by severity of illness and expected mortality on the basis of standardized mortality
rates
Unplanned readmissions (e.g., rate, source, reason for readmission, outcomes)
Conflicts (e.g., rate and type of conflicts or disagreements during discharge, including those between medical teams
and families)
Family/patient satisfaction. If patients or families are not satisfied with service, identify the problems and address
them

ICU ADT
policy

Compliance with the ICU ADT policy (e.g., number of policy violations, number of inappropriate admissions, number of
delayed discharges)
Overall ICU performance. A multidisciplinary committee should review and discuss the metrics on an ongoing basis,
and the outcomes should be analyzed and considered for implementation of improvement measures
Needed changes to the ICU ADT policy upon periodic reviews according to needs and changes at each institution

RRS = rapid response system, ED = emergency department, LOS = length of stay, ADT = admission, discharge, and triage.

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task complicated by the numerous of variables to consider,


the complexity of critically ill patients, and the diversity of
healthcare systems. Tools can be developed that can assist
with guiding decisions; however, no policy or tool can replace
the clinical judgment of the critical care multiprofessional
team. Future directions for developing the most predictable
process for determining patient placement should focus on

Improving accuracy of severity scoring tools (APACHE,


SAPS, and Mortality Prediction Model) and nursing productivity models.
Utilizing electronic medical record documentation to automatically capture patient characteristics and developing a
self-populating tool for ADT.
Utilizing telemedicine to monitor discharged patients and
capture red flags to increase timeliness of intervention
and prevent readmission to critical care.
Utilizing telemedicine to assist with monitoring critical care
patients who were triaged to a nontraditional critical care
unit because of lack of critical care bed availability.
Determining how standardization of all critical care processes (policies, team hand-off reports, rounds reports,
nurse-driven protocols, and standing orders) influences
ADT decisions.
Determining how the use of nonintensivist physicians
admitting to a critical care unit affects decisions about
patient placement.
Determining how hardwiring of safety and quality measures can be captured as a characteristic of nurse workload
to determine the impact on discharge and triage/transfer
criteria.
Exploring including a palliative care/end-of-life specialist as
a member of the critical care team to build relationships
with families and assist in decision making.

NONBENEFICIAL TREATMENT (FUTILE CARE)


IN THE ICU
Nonbeneficial treatment, or futile care, was not addressed in
the previous version of these guidelines (5). Medical futility received a lot of attention in the early nineties during the
intense national debates regarding healthcare reform (355).
With the exception of the 1999 report by the Council on Ethical
and Judicial Affairs committee of the American Medical Association (AMA) (356), the subject received progressively less
attention during the next decade, and it has not been directly
addressed in guidelines for critically ill patients since 1997
(357, 358), when futility was extensively discussed by the Ethics
Committee of the SCCM in a consensus statement regarding
futile and otherwise inadvisable treatments (357) and by the
American Thoracic Society in an official statement on the fair
allocation of intensive care resources (358). Because of the difficulties associated with the type of evidence for determining
futility, the extreme complexity of the subject, and the infeasibility of covering the subject in its entirety in these guidelines,
here we only briefly comment on a few aspects of the topic
related to ADT.
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Terminology
Recommendation:

We suggest using the term nonbeneficial treatment whenever clinicians consider further care futile (Ungraded).

The definition of futile care remains controversial; there


is no current consensus or definitive, objective definition (359,
360). Futile care has been described as an intervention that
only prolongs the final stages of the dying process (356), but
many other definitions have also been published (356, 357,
359, 360). The AMAs Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs
has stated that a fully objective and concrete definition of futility is unattainable (356). Qualitative definitions of futile care
are value laden and have not helped to resolve disagreements
among patients, families, healthcare providers, and courts
(355). Regrettably, quantitative definitions have not helped
solve this problem either.
The Ethics Committee of the SCCM has discouraged using
the concept of futility to establish policies that limit care (357)
and has recommended not using the term futile care. We concur with this recommendation. Until critical care practitioners
can accurately predict specific outcomes in clinical practice
and reach consensus regarding which clinical situations are
futile, we suggest avoiding the term futile at the bedside.
Instead of futile care, the SCCM Ethics Committee recommended the term inadvisable treatment; others have recommended the term nonbeneficial treatment (361). The terms,
regardless of how they are defined, are subjective, as are many
of the factors that we use to determine benefit (e.g., likelihood
of success of an intervention, the life expectancy or quality of
life of the patient, burdens to all affected by the event, wishes of
the patient and their closest relatives). Nevertheless, among these
terms, nonbeneficial appears to confer a less threatening connotation (compared to futile) and a more professional estimation
(compared with inappropriate or inadvisable) that providing or
continuing to provide treatments is not, in our opinion, in the
best interest of the patient. An example would be continuing to
provide ventilatory support to a leukemia patient in respiratory
failure and multiorgan failure with poor prognosis. However, in
certain circumstances, such as requests for interventions that in
our medical opinion are unethical, the term inappropriate treatment should be used. An example would be performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) in a patient with metastatic
cancer, in multiorgan failure, with a devastating intracranial
hemorrhage.
Attempts to Design Objective Models for
Determining Nonbeneficial Treatment Status
Recommendations:

We suggest avoiding the current quantitative definitions of


nonbeneficial treatment because of the lack of consensus on
a single definition (ungraded).
We suggest against the routine use of the currently available
severity-of-illness scores for identifying nonbeneficial treatments in specific patients (grade 2C).
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We suggest that the information provided by healthcare


professionals be quantitative to reduce disagreement
between the prognostic information delivered to the
patients surrogates and their understanding and acceptance of the message (grade 2C).

Several quantitative approaches to determining futility were


developed in the early 1990s, but they have failed to be adopted
in clinical practice. Schneiderman et al (360, 362) suggested
the following threshold for deciding when a treatment is nonbeneficial or futile: when a medical treatment has fewer than
one success in 100 uses or when it only helps to preserve permanent coma. However, the risk of error in these calculations
and lack of data for all the disorders and populations admitted to the ICU have led to the use of clinicians actual experience and individual biases instead. In addition, individualized
predictions based on any of the numerous scores available are
not appropriate and should not be used alone to make such
decisions (357, 358). In a comprehensive response to the
numerous criticisms of their approach, Schneiderman et al
(363) addressed the lack of professional or societal consensus
about the definition of futility, the concern that empirical data
could not be applied with certainty to any given patient, the
concern that empirical data may suggest decisions that conflict
with patients religious beliefs, and the fact that rationing and
resource allocation will ultimately determine medical futility,
among other criticisms.
Other quantitative approaches proposed included a mathematical model by Murphy and Matchar (364) to identify
thresholds for deciding the medical and economical appropriateness of a given treatment, as well as a cost-effectiveness ratio.
Teno et al (365) suggested implementation of a strict prognosis-based futility guideline. They analyzed 4,301 patients
enrolled in the Study to Understand Prognoses and Preferences
for Outcomes and Risks of Treatment (SUPPORT) and identified 115 individuals (2.7%) with less than a 1% chance of surviving 2 months. In a simulation of the model, they found that
stopping treatment of those 115 patients earlier would have
saved $1.2 million (14%) of the $8.8 million in total charges.
Also, nearly 75% of the reduction in the total number of hospital days was due to the simulated discontinuation of treatment
of only 12 patients. The researchers concluded that patients at
high risk of dying could be identified, but the implementation
of a strict, prognosis-based futility guideline on the third day
would have resulted in only modest savings.
Regardless of the model used and its limitations, the discrepancies among healthcare providers opinions remain an
important obstacle to standardizing decisions about nonbeneficial treatments (366). In a study about the prevalence of
withholding and withdrawal of life support from the critically
ill, Prendergast and Luce (367) showed that only 4% of physicians considered medical futility on the basis of low probability
of survival alone. Others considered comorbid diseases leading to recurrent hospitalizations or death, poor quality of life,
patients suffering, and even resource allocation in their decisions. In the recent Eldicus Triage Consensus, physicians were
Critical Care Medicine

not able to agree to a cutoff probability for triage even when


the chance of survival was estimated at 0.1% (186).
Although the use of predictive models or scores has been
suggested to aid in the identification of nonbeneficial treatment, these models, in addition to having large margins of
error, have been developed for group predictions and are not
appropriate for establishing futility in individual cases. The
early adoption of any of futility prediction models or recommendations could slow medical progress in terms of the
development of adequate therapies to improve the survival of
patients with conditions that have initially high mortality rates.
Neither doctors nor nurses have been able to demonstrate
accurate predictive abilities (366). However, this problem is
more complex than providers being able to make accurate
predictions. A recent randomized study (368) comparing
the reliability of quantitative versus qualitative statements in
discussions conveying prognostic estimates in two video versions of a simulated family conference showed that there was
a big gap between what was conveyed by the doctors and what
patients surrogates understood from the doctors predictions.
The patients understanding of the physicians estimates did
not differ based on whether the information was provided
quantitatively (17% likelihood of patient survival 22% sd)
versus qualitatively (1617%; p = 0.62). Almost half of the
surrogates (47%) believed that their relatives had much better
prognosis than the prognosis provided by the physicians, and
the surrogates own estimates of likelihood of patient survival
did not differ based on whether the information was provided
qualitatively (mean likelihood 2624% sd) versus quantitatively (2223%; p = 0.26). Among the group as a whole,
the surrogates mean estimate of patients survival likelihood
(2322%) was more than twice the rate provided by the physician (10%; p < 0.0001). In the multivariate analysis, the authors
found that the two variables associated with less discordance
were trust in the patients physician (coefficient, 0.85; 95%
CI, 1.7 to 0.04; p = 0.04) and receiving the prognostic information quantitatively (coefficient, 9.2; 95% CI, 14.5 to 3.8;
p = 0.001). Another publication noted that nonbeneficial
interventions can be perceived differently if they are cheap,
easy, and without morbidity versus aggressive, technologically
intensive, and entailing great pain and suffering (369).
Delivery of Nonbeneficial Treatment in the ICU
Recommendation:

We suggest developing clear ICU and institutional nonbeneficial treatment policies through consensus of all the parties involved (physicians, nurses, administrators, lawyers,
ethicists, and family representatives) (ungraded).

Care that is considered to be nonbeneficial continues to be


delivered around the world. For example, Hariharan et al (370)
reported in Barbados the continued provision of aggressive
treatment to patients whose prognoses were considered futile
by some of the healthcare providers. A third of the patients
who died in the investigators ICU, 5% of the 662 admissions,
met their futility criteria, including patients diagnosed as dead
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by neurological criteria, or brain dead. The authors found that


age, legal considerations, family wishes, and disagreement
among treating physicians were the main reasons for the futile
treatment (370).
In a Canadian survey, Palda et al (371) reported that 95% of
the nurses and 87% of the physicians responding to the survey
had provided futile care during the past year. They identified
eight main reasons for the provision of nonbeneficial treatment by these practitioners. The most common reason was the
perception of death as a treatment failure by the physicians,
and the second was poor communication between the providers and families. Among the other reasons recognized were
prognostic uncertainty, legal pressures, and fragmented care
owing to the involvement of multiple subspecialists.
The study of Palda et al (371) showed a significant difference between the opinions of nurses and physicians regarding futile care (368). Frick et al (366) have also described
such disagreements between nurses and doctors. The higher
the severity score and the longer the ICU stay, the higher the
discrepancy between nurses and doctors opinions regarding
nonbeneficial treatment. Nurses were more pessimistic in general; of the 284 days in which daily judgments were recorded,
nurses considered withdrawal on 123 days and physicians on
26 days (p < 0.001). Nurses also more frequently than doctors
considered care to be futile for survival (92 vs 61 d; p < 0.001)
and quality of life (119 vs 70 d; p < 0.001).
In a more recent study, Huynh et al (372) studied the frequency of provision of perceived futile treatments defined
through a focus group consensus process and identified via a
multivariate model. The investigators found that 134 patients
among 1,136 patients in five Californian ICUs received 464
days of nonbeneficial treatments for a total cost of $2.6 million. The authors considered the costs to be substantial, in contrast to others who have downplayed the economical impact of
these interventions, such as the SUPPORT study investigators
(365) and Luce and Rubenfeld (373).
Nonbeneficial Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Recommendation:

We suggest that prudent clinical judgment, in conjunction


with the latest American Heart Association guidelines and
specific local and hospital policies, be followed in deciding
when to withhold or terminate cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ungraded).

Modern CPR was developed from efforts to resuscitate


patients from sudden cardiac death in the 1700s, and this technique has been a main focus during medical training since
(374). CPR is performed on any patient in cardiac arrest even
if the arrest is the result of a chronic and debilitating terminal disease or the patient is dying, as long as there is not an
advance directive to the contrary or an objective sign of irreversible death (e.g., rigor mortis or decapitation).
Deciding not only when to start CPR but also when to stop is
difficult. The evolution of termination-of-resuscitation rules is
an excellent example of the complexity and challenges we face
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when considering using the term nonbeneficial treatment


as a justification for setting limits on medical interventions.
Decision rules for termination of nonbeneficial resuscitations
for in-hospital cardiac arrests were proposed in 1999 (375).
Guidelines by the National Association of Emergency Medical
Services Physicians Standards and Clinical Practice Committee
for termination of resuscitation in the prehospital setting (376)
were published in 2000. These were followed in 2003 by guidelines for withholding or terminating resuscitation in cases of
prehospital traumatic cardiopulmonary arrest, authored by
the same group in association with the American College of
Surgeons Committee on Trauma (377, 378). However, since
those guidelines were published, the practices have come into
question in light of changes made to the American Heart
Association (AHA) resuscitation recommendations in 2005
(379, 380).
The AHA dedicates a chapter of its guidelines to the ethical
aspects of CPR and the issue of futility. In the past, the chapter included ethical guidelines, a simple decision algorithm in
cases of cardiopulmonary arrest, as well as recommendations
on when to stop CPR. The recommendations clearly stated
that the burden of the decision to terminate resuscitation
rested with the responsible clinician and that clinical judgment
always trumps clinical criteria: In the final analysis, the decision that a resuscitation attempt would be futile is a matter of
medical judgment that only a responsible physician can make
(381). This leaves room for variability in the delivery and termination of any resuscitative effort, as two physicians could
easily disagree in any given case. Additional interventions, such
as therapeutic cooling (382) and the introduction of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation as a part of the management of
circulatory arrest (383), have further complicated adherence to
these recommendations, despite studies validating the guidelines rules (380, 384). The AHA continues narrowing the rules
for termination of resuscitation and in the most recent recommendations published at the end of 2010 questioned the reliability of the evidence calling for prospective validation (385).
Regardless, CPR continues to be provided in conditions that
have been considered nonbeneficial even by the practitioners
who provide the treatment (386, 387). Family, peer pressure,
and legal pressures are among the important reasons for this
practice.
Death by Neurological Criteria
Recommendation:

We suggest that life-supportive therapies be removed in


cases of patients declared dead by neurological criteria in
accordance with local law (including potential legal restrictions associated with the patients religious beliefs), hospital
policies, and standard medical practice and after appropriate organ donation considerations (ungraded).

Guidelines for the determination of death by neurological


criteria were updated and published by the American Academy
of Neurology in 2010 (388). Most of the recommendations are
classified by the academy as grade U, or studies not meeting
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level of evidence from class I to III; data inadequate or conflicting; given current knowledge, treatment is unproven. Brain
death could be seen as a diagnosis that leads to simple medical decisions. However, a familys reluctance or religious beliefs
can complicate or lead to challenging decisions about life-supportive therapy withdrawal.
In some circumstances, legal considerations can affect
clinical practice. For example, for the declaration of brain
death, the State of New Jersey includes in its law exemptions
to accommodate personal religious beliefs as well as specific examination guidelines and physician standards (389).
Similarly, in Israel, the Brain Death Law prohibits the discontinuation of ventilation in brain-dead patients if the family
disagrees with the life-support withdrawal (390); in addition,
another law addressing terminally ill patients prohibits the
withdrawal of ventilators (391). Physicians and other healthcare providers (e.g., nurses, respiratory therapists) who find
themselves in analogous circumstances need the assistance
of the legal services of their institutions for multiple reasons,
including the risk of harm to healthcare providers, the legal
implications of continuing life support to a patient declared
dead or even not yet declared brain dead, additional costs for
the institution, and the inappropriate utilization of critical
care resources (392).
When a patients relatives object to withdrawal despite
expert attempts to explain that the patient is brain dead,
unsatisfactory agreements or legal conflicts may result. In a
recent report, Smith and Flamm (393) described the case of
a brain-dead patient dispute between a very religious Jewish
family and the medical team. The authors described in detail
all the social, ethical, medical, and legal ramifications of the
opposition to accepting the diagnosis, complicated by the
vagueness of the state laws statements that require reasonable short-term accommodation; the patient was finally
transferred to another institutions ICU, leaving the case
essentially unresolved. Laws of the states of New York and
New Jersey require a reasonable accommodation period
in cases in which the family objects on religious or moral
grounds. The lack of clear recommendations by the authors
exemplifies the challenges of providing clear advice for future
similar cases.
Such legal battles are not infrequent, do not happen only
in New York and New Jersey, and can involve other religious
groups that disagree with the diagnosis of brain death. Buddhist
beliefs also represent a challenge for many practitioners that
find themselves in these situations; recently, a Buddhist family obtained a restraining order against Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center in Massachusetts to prevent the withdrawal of
life support of their relative who had been declared brain dead.
Because of deterioration of the patients extremities, the hospital pursued stopping life support by seeking an order from the
court (394). In addition to legal and religious challenges, the
potential for organ donation also has to be considered when
confronted with the decision to admit a patient to the ICU as
well as the decision to withdraw life-supportive therapies. The
ramifications of these decisions reach beyond local practices
Critical Care Medicine

and policies affecting the lives of numerous patients waiting


for organ transplantation.
Reducing the Delivery of Nonbeneficial Treatment
Ethics Teams.
Recommendation:

We suggest the early involvement of ethicists (within 24hr


of identifying potential or actual conflict) to aid in conflicts
associated with nonbeneficial treatment (grade 2C).

Ethics consultations have been suggested as a means


of resolving conflicts associated with nonbeneficial treatment. Since the publication of the SCCM (357), American
Thoracic Society (358), and AMA (395) consensus guidelines, only three randomized studies have investigated the
role of these consultations (396398). The first study, from
a single center, explored the impact of ethics consultations
in the ICU on reducing the number of nonbeneficial treatments for patients who could not survive until hospital discharge (396). The investigators randomized 74 patients who
had value-based conflicts during their management and
found that although there was no difference in mortality
rates between patients who were offered ethics consultations
and those who were not, the intervention group had fewer
ICU hospital days and life-sustaining treatments. The second study, a multicenter study, was a larger-scale replication
of the first study; 551 patients from seven U.S. hospitals were
randomized into the two groups (397). The researchers demonstrated a significant reduction in the number of hospital
days (2.95 d; p = 0.01), ICU days (1.44 d; p = 0.03), and
ventilator days (1.7 d; p = 0.03) in the intervention group,
and most participants (87%) involved in the process, including healthcare providers and patients surrogates, thought
ethics consultations were helpful in resolving their conflicts.
The third randomized study investigated the impact of a
proactive intervention by a bioethicist in reducing utilization
of ICU resources in a large tertiary center medical/surgical
ICU (398). This study failed to demonstrate any significant
difference in hospital LOS, number of nonbeneficial treatments, surrogate satisfaction, or hospital costs, conflicting
with the previous two studies.
In a multicenter study, Gilmer et al (399) investigated the
costs associated with nonbeneficial ICU treatment and found
a mean cost difference of $5,246 per patient. They estimated
that in a 40-bed ICU with the same rate of consultation, a
mortality rate of 60%, and savings of $5,246 per patient,
treatment costs would be reduced by $157,380 per year if the
nonbeneficial therapy were withheld. These modest savings
further strengthen the findings of the SUPPORT study (365)
and suggest that conflicts arising from futility discussions
leading to costly legal confrontations may negate the potential healthcare savings intended by enforcing a strict policy of
nonbeneficial treatment. Other authors have estimated more
substantial savings; Huynh et al (372) estimated $2.6 million
in costs of nonbeneficial treatment during a 3-month study in
five ICUs, equivalent to $10.4 million/yr.
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Palliative Care Teams.


Recommendation:

Although palliative medicine consultations have been previously associated with reduction in critical care resources,
the most recent evidence does not support a recommendation, emphasizing the need for additional high-quality
research on this subject (no recommendation).

A recent study of two retrospective cohorts investigated the


role of palliative medicine consultations on do-not-resuscitate
(DNR) designations and LOS of patients with terminal disease in a medical ICU. There was a significant increase in the
utilization of life-supportive limitations with a higher rate of
DNR designations in the intervention group (86% vs 68%)
(400). The authors also found a reduction in hospital LOS
(p < 0.01) and ICU LOS (p < 0.01). In contrast, the Educate,
Nurture, Advise, Before Life Ends II randomized controlled
trial did not show improvements in outcomes (some of the
symptoms, LOS, and ICU or ED utilization) after palliative
care consultations (intervention group); at the same time, the
costs of management of these patients increased (400). In a
systematic review, Zimmermann et al (401) showed that after
a palliative care intervention, a cost reduction was seen in only
one of seven studies, improved quality of life in only four of
13 studies, and improvement in symptoms in one of 14 studies. The authors concluded that because of methodological
shortcomings, more carefully planned trials are needed and
that standardized palliative care interventions and specific
measures for this population are needed.
In a before-and-after study of a palliative care qualityimprovement intervention conducted in a single-center ICU,
Curtis et al (402) found no significant changes in quality of
dying (from the familys perspective) or family satisfaction.
Furthermore, Curtis et al (403), in a cluster randomized study
of a multifaceted intervention in 12 hospitals with 2,318 eligible patients, showed no improvement after the intervention
in perceived quality of dying, ICU LOS before death, or time
from ICU admission to withdrawal of life-supportive therapies. A subanalysis of 20032008 data collected for that study
did not show significant changes over time although they
identified significant interhospital variation in palliative care
delivery and ratings (404). Finally, it may be that these services were underutilized, as suggested by the editorial of Truog
(405); only 8% and 1% of the patients had palliative care and
ethics consults, respectively.
Research on the use of early palliative care for patients with
complex conditions such as metastatic lung cancer has demonstrated beneficial effects, including improvements in quality of life and mood and less aggressive care at the end of life.
In a randomized study of early palliative care intervention,
patients in the intervention group reported better quality-oflife scores and less depression and had more documentation
of resuscitation preferences and less aggressive care at the end
of life, compared with the control group (406). Yet ICU use in
the last days of life continues to increase, as demonstrated in
multiple reports in the United States and Canada (407409).
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Despite the conflicting results between retrospective/


observational and systematic review/randomized studies, the
use of early implementation and integration of palliative care
in the patients plan of care is promulgated by experts (410).
Unfortunately, the unclear value of these interventions in the
ICU setting, reports of increased costs associated with implementation of these programs, the lack of widespread public
awareness of the goals of palliative care, and poor implementation of palliative medicine at early or even late stages of
disease demand further focused research to answer these
questions (400, 405, 410).
Potential for Nonbeneficial Treatment to be Harmful
Although the discussion of potential harm caused by nonbeneficial treatment is beyond the scope of this article, it is
important to highlight some of the current concerns about the
misallocation of critical care resources and bring them to public attention for further discussion. Recent voices have questioned the indiscriminate delivery of nonbeneficial treatment
even in systems with unlimited resources (411). Some examples of unethical treatment include the delivery of less effective
treatments to demanding patient populations (e.g., aggressive life-supportive treatments at the end of life) and providing antibiotics even when they are considered nonbeneficial
treatment, which could lead to antibiotic resistance, making it
more difficult or impossible to treat other patient populations
in need. In addition, the individuals receiving nonbeneficial
treatments could be also negatively affected; while expending
all their economic resources on expensive treatments that do
not improve the outcome of their disease, they could be left
with no coverage for later treatable ailments or have their lives
shortened by opting for aggressive therapies prone to more
complications. In a randomized study of patients with metastatic lung cancer, Temel et al (412) recently compared standard oncologic care integrated with early palliative care versus
standard oncologic care alone. They showed that patients
receiving early palliative care used less aggressive care at the
end of life and yet lived longer. Niederman and Berger (411)
and others consider the delivery of nonbeneficial treatment to
be not only an individual decision but also a societal problem,
requiring a solution to reduce the unequal allocation of progressively scarcer healthcare resources.
Conflicts in Determining Nonbeneficial Treatment
Recommendation:

We suggest following the SCCM Ethics Committees 1997


general recommendations for determining when treatments are nonbeneficial and for resolving end-of-life conflicts regarding withholding or withdrawing life support.
We also support the fair-process approach recommended
by the AMAs Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs committee (ungraded).

Occasionally, patients or their relatives have opposing views


about the provision or termination of life-supportive therapies.
There seems to be a developing emphasis on family-centered
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care and a shared decision-making process for addressing the


withholding and withdrawal of life-supportive therapies. This
consensus-based approach could reduce potentially nonbeneficial treatment (355, 413, 414). In cases in which conflict
between patients or their families and the healthcare team
arises, the adoption of the fair process recommended by the
Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs of the AMA has gained
strength. This process has been adopted by many institutions
and has even been incorporated into law in the states of Texas
and California (217, 414, 415). However, concerns about the
constitutionality of some of these processes have been raised
and remain unresolved (416).
Future Directions and Research
Recommendations:

There is growing concern that nonbeneficial treatment


affects not only the individuals receiving these treatments
but also the rest of the population. Providing nonbeneficial
treatments reduces the availability of the same resources in
more appropriate situations, treatments, or patients and
could cause unwanted and unrecognized harm. The effect
of this practice has an unknown effect on the healthcare system as a whole, leading to an urgent need to better understand the impact of misallocation of critical care resources
in the U.S. healthcare system (ungraded).
As a result of the major knowledge gaps identified, we suggest that more research be performed on all aspects of the
determination and provision of nonbeneficial ICU treatment (ungraded).

The need for guidance in making decisions to administer


or withdraw life support has led to the development of a multitude of tools and guidelines. Recently, Giacomini et al (417)
identified life-support decision tools as an important area of
critical care practice and research. In their review of 49 publications addressing this problem, the researchers critically
appraised what they considered to be an abundant body of
literature reporting a wide variety of tools to aid in different
aspects of this process. However, they pointed out some of the
discrepancies of the different documents in their positions on
key life support, as well as in their scope and practicality. The
investigators recommended that future research focus on how
to interpret and apply these tools, as well as on their impact
on the quality of patient care and outcomes. The cost reduction associated with the reduction of nonbeneficial therapy
has been reported to be modest (365, 399). However, the costeffectiveness of such efforts to reduce nonbeneficial therapy,
including enlarging palliative/supportive care teams, is still
under debate.

RATIONING
As with the issue of nonbeneficial treatment, the rationing of
medical care has been extensively discussed in the past. Rationing has been interpreted in several ways (362). More recently,
the Task Force on Values, Ethics, and Rationing in Critical Care
Critical Care Medicine

defined it as the allocation of potentially beneficial healthcare


services to some individuals in the face of limited availability
that necessarily involves the withholding of those services from
other individuals (158). The definition can be customized
according to the specific service rationed. For example, rationing of nursing care has been defined as the withholding or
failure to carry out necessary nursing tasks due to inadequate
time, staffing level, and/or skill mix (107).
As the U.S. healthcare system changes and critical care costs
increase (418), attention to this old problem has reintensified. A
recent study by Ward et al (419) examined perceptions of nurse
and physician directors regarding resource use and constraints
in 447U.S. hospitals with ICUs. Their results indicated that
nurses have a larger role than physicians do in managing ICU
costs; 91% of nurse directors versus 38% of physician directors were given feedback on expenditures, and nurse directors
played a larger role in ICU budgetary decisions. Interestingly,
many of the responders agreed that too much care (excessive
care for some patients) was being provided in their units; for
this question, 46% of the physician directors and 39% of the
nurse directors chose the responses sometimes (2575% of
the time) or frequently (> 75% of the time). In contrast, only
7% of both nurse and physician directors thought that patients
received too few resources sometimes or frequently. The
additional pressure of the diminishing physician workforce has
led to new coverage models, including telemedicine, the use of
nurse practitioners and physician assistants, and hospitalists,
that have the potential to improve resource utilization (418).
Impact of Rationing on ICU Outcomes
Although earlier studies failed to demonstrate a difference in
outcomes between those admitted to the ICU versus those
denied ICU admission (395), many subsequent studies indicate otherwise. Sinuff et al (158) found that the mortality
rate was higher for patients refused ICU admission than for
patients admitted to the ICU (OR, 3.04; 95% CI, 1.496.17).
In their systematic review, they found that age, illness severity,
and medical diagnosis were used to triage patients and refuse
patients at times of ICU bed shortages. During bed shortages,
those admitted to the ICU were sicker, were less often admitted for monitoring, and had shorter ICU stays than during
times of greater bed availability. In practice, intensivists made
the majority of the triage and rationing decisions. The authors
stated that the relative importance of the factors used to triage
(e.g., age, illness severity, and medical diagnosis) was uncertain.
The data were not sufficient to provide clear recommendations
or guidance for rationing based on this systematic review.
Simchen et al (126) also showed in a prevalence study an
improvement in survival among those admitted to the ICU, but
only in the first 3 days after deterioration and after adjusting
for age and severity of illness. They concluded that there was a
window of critical opportunity that could be used to increase
the turnover of patients in ICUs under economic constraints
or with bed shortages. Vanhecke et al (420) showed that of
1,302 patients referred to the ICU, 353 (27%) were not admitted, mostly because they were too well to benefit. Among
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the patients who were not admitted, those who died within
6 months were characterized by older age, more severe illnesses,
greater likelihood of being enrolled in hospice at the time of
the evaluation, and more likely to decline care than those still
living at 6 months. Among the 324 patients analyzed, 9% of
the patients considered too well to benefit from the critical care services deteriorated and required admission within
48 hours, and they had a 36% mortality rate at 6 months.
Another study by Simchen et al (421) showed that only a
small percentage of patients eligible for ICU care actually were
admitted to the unit; of 44,000 patients screened, 749 patients
(1.7%) met predetermined ICU admission criteria, but only
13% of these patients were admitted. The majority of the
patients (55%) were admitted to general wards, and 32% were
admitted to special units.
Edbrooke et al (422) have suggested that intensive care
therapies are as effective as therapies considered essential;
however, they lamented that because ICU care was considered
expensive, this led to an unreasonable restriction in the availability of these resources. In their multicenter, multinational
study that encompassed 11 hospitals in seven European countries, they found an overall relative mortality risk among the
patients triaged to ICU of 0.70 (95% CI, 0.520.94) at 28 days.
As the predicted mortality of the patients increased, the RR of
ICU admission decreased, with a RR of 0.55 (95% CI, 0.37
0.83) in patients with a predicted mortality of greater than
40%. The estimated mean difference in total cost per hospital
stay between patients accepted and not accepted into the ICU
was $6,156 (95% CI, $5,0287,283), with a cost per life-year
saved of $7,065 (95% CI, $3,009$11,073).
Data from the Rationing of Nursing Care in Switzerland
study have shown worsening in all the variables studied during rationing (107). Schubert et al (107) explored the association between implicit rationing of nursing care and six
selected patient outcomes in a cross-sectional study of patients
and nurses in eight acute-care hospitals. They used a validated instrument that includes 20 items, the Basel Extent of
Rationing of Nursing Care (BERNCA). During implicit
rationing (combination of low nursing resources, high nurse
workloads, and increased patient complexity and care needs),
significantly worse outcomes were found for patient satisfaction, nurse-reported medication errors (adjusted OR, 1.68;
95% CI, 1.172.41), patient falls (adjusted OR, 2.81; 95% CI,
1.654.78), nosocomial infections (adjusted OR, 1.61; 95%
CI, 1.032.51), pressure ulcers (adjusted OR, 1.15; 95% CI,
1.061.25), and critical incidents (adjusted OR, 1.1; 95% CI,
1.041.17) (105).
In 2012, the same investigators reported the impact of
rationing of nursing care on inpatient mortality (106). In this
cross-sectional correlational study, they found that patients
were 51% more likely to die in hospitals with the highest rationing level (in terms of the patient-to-nurse ratio as measured
with the BERNCA tool) when compared with the other centers
studied (adjusted OR, 1.51; 95% CI, 1.341.70). Patients treated
in hospitals with a higher-quality nurse work environment
(measured with the nurse work environment index-revised,
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a validated tool with 51 items) had a significantly lower risk


of death (adjusted OR, 0.8; 95% CI, 0.670.97); in contrast,
patients treated in hospitals with high patient-to-nurse ratios
of 10:1 had a 37% higher risk of death (adjusted OR, 1.37; 95%
CI, 1.241.52).
Other studies have examined bed occupancy and mortality risk. Staffing concerns have also been raised from the
significant increased mortality observed during higher bed
occupancy rates in Danish hospitals between 1995 and 2012
(109). Madsen et al (109) found an overall 1.2% mortality risk
increase for each additional 10% bed occupancy rate, with
significant increases in both in-hospital and 30-day mortality
rates. Gabler et al (168) have also reported this association in
strained ICUs.
Systems for Rationing Critical Care
Recommendation:

We suggest adhering to the recommendations of the SCCM


Ethics Committee, the Council on Ethical and Judicial
Affairs of the American Medical Association, and the Bioethics Task Force of the American Thoracic Society for the
ethical allocation of scarce medical resources until updated
or appropriate evidence-based operational frameworks
become available (ungraded).

As described in General Considerations section, General


Considerations (Triage), in a consensus statement published in
1994, the SCCM Ethics Committee addressed the distribution
of scarce resources during the process of triage of critically ill
patients (129). In addition to the important elements to consider during triage, the committee highlighted the need for a
benefit to be derived from the ICU admission. In other words,
the committee considered that the provision of these resources
should be linked with likelihood of benefit. The main principles proposed by the committee included 1) providers should
advocate for patients; 2) members of the provider team should
collaborate; 3) care must be restricted in an equitable system;
4) decisions to give care should be based on expected benefit; 5) mechanisms for alternative care should be planned;
6) explicit policies should be written; 7) prior public notification is necessary. The Ethics Committee clearly recommended
against admitting patients with a likely poor outcome and stated
that patients who are not expected to benefit from intensive
care, such as those with imminently fatal illnesses or permanent
unconsciousness, should not be placed in the ICU.
The Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs committee of
the AMA has also addressed some of the ethical considerations
required for the allocation of scarce medical resources (395).
In the 1995 statement, the Council proposed several important
elements to take into consideration during allocation of scarce
resources; among them: 1) the likelihood of benefit to the
patient, 2) the impact of treatment in improving the quality of
the patients life, 3) the duration of benefit, 4) the urgency of
the patients condition (i.e., how close the patient is to death),
and in some cases, 5) the amount of resources required for successful treatment.
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In 1997, a multidisciplinary Bioethics Task Force of the


American Thoracic Society (ATS) published an extensive and
detailed advisory statement on the fair allocation of intensive
care resources (358). The ATS Task Force proposed five principles and 12 position statements in regard to fair allocation
of resources. Among the principles, the group sustained that:
1) ICU care, when medically appropriate, is an essential component of a basic package of health care services that should
be available for all; and 2) The duty of health care providers to benefit an individual patient has limits when doing so
unfairly compromises the availability of resources needed by
others. Among the position statements, the group affirmed
that: access to ICU care requires that patients have sufficient
medical need; whenever feasible, patients should give their
informed consent for initiation and continuation of ICU care;
when demand for ICU beds exceeds supply, medically appropriate patients should be admitted on a first-come, first-served
basis; access for marginally beneficial ICU care ... may be
restricted on the basis of its limited benefit relative to cost;
prior to health care institutions limiting access to ICU care
on the basis of limited benefit relative to cost, prerequisites
for efficient use of health care resources, fair redistribution of
savings, and public disclosure must be fulfilled; health care
institutions and their providers should ensure availability of
ICU beds by matching supply to medical need; and health
care institutions and their providers should limit access to ICU
resources by means of explicit policies that are made known to
patients and the public.
The ATS Task Force recommendations mention a firstcome, first-served basis for ICU admission, whereas the SCCM
Ethics Committee recommendations indicate that patient benefit be considered. However, in the most recent recommendation by the participants in the Eldicus study consensus process
(186), 100% of respondents stated that decisions should not
be made on a first-come, first-served basis. In addition, despite
the fact that most of the participants represented practiced in
ICUs where patients frequently had to be refused ICU admission, they agreed that patients should be refused ICU admission only when the chance of survival was exceedingly low: the
agreement levels for refusing admission were 48% if the chance
of survival was less than or equal to 1% (one in 100); 65% if the
chance of survival was less than or equal to 0.2% (one in 500);
and 77% if the chance of survival was less than or equal to
0.1% (one in 1,000). There seems to be a shift away from obligations to patients already hospitalized, perhaps because of the
recent pandemics/disasters and resultant planning, and more
of an emphasis on age. There was 100% consensus that Age
should never be the sole determining factor in triage decisions
and Physiological status is more important than chronological age in triage decisions. These principles nothwithstanding,
during epidemics or mass disaster conditions when benefit
is even more difficult to determine, a first-come, first-served
approach may have to be used.
Truog et al (423) provided a taxonomical framework of
rationing in critical care for further development through
empirical evidence and ethical analysis. They divided rationing
Critical Care Medicine

decisions into three main categories: decisions made on the


basis of external constraints, those made on the basis of clinical guidelines, and those made on the basis of clinical judgment. Hurst and Danis (424) further advanced this framework
by dividing clinical judgment into three categories: decisions
made on the basis of triage (e.g., limited time, limited beds,
and limited staff), those made on the basis of fixed resources
(e.g., insufficient blood supplies), and those made on the basis
of physician opinion (e.g., assessment of individual benefit or
cost). The authors also outlined a proposal to apply the proposed rationing framework. In an innovative approach to gain
a better understanding of this complex problem, Strosberg
(425) has recently experimented with simulations, including
role-playing and incorporating organizational theory perspective. However, despite our growing concerns about rationing
for over two decades (426, 427), to date, no practical or consistent guidelines exist to systematically allocate scarce intensive
care resources (423).
Future Directions and Research
Recommendation:

Further research is needed on all aspects of rationing critical care resources to narrow the current gaps in allocating
scarce resources (ungraded).

Cook and Giacomini (428) have suggested that investigating


rationing is central to understanding the practice of medicine
as we approached the new millennium. As our understanding
continues to improve with the increasing body of knowledge
in this area, the limited role that bedside clinicians and ICU
directors play in the management of ICU resources must be
taken into account (419). Some bedside clinical interventions,
such as identification of those at the end of life with the intent
of reducing LOS and costs, do not seem to be matched with
significant cost savings (373). Some have suggested that a better approach may be to improve efficiency in ICU settings
by increasing our reliance on information technology and
increasing the role of telemedicine in the delivery of critical
care, but studies to support these assertions are needed (429
432). Recent experiences of various healthcare systems utilizing
tele-ICU have been reported to be positive (433); however, in
a study including more than 4,000 patients, Thomas et al (434)
were not able to demonstrate a significant impact of electronic
ICU systems on LOS or on ICU or hospital mortality rates. It is
still too early to fully understand the multidimensional aspects
and impact of the use of this technology in the delivery of critical care services, and the topic demands further study (430).
The misutilization of scarce or expensive resources remains
a present and future important problem that needs to be
addressed. We must educate primary care physicians, cardiologists, pulmonologists, hematologists, oncologists, and other
clinicians to talk to their patients with serious illnesses and
determine the patients real wishes. Patients should be provided with proper advance care planning (a process through
which patients, in consultation with their relatives and physicians, make individual decisions regarding their current and
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future medical treatments) (435), including discussions about


realistic probabilities of cure, benefits of interventions, probabilities of dying despite interventions, hospice, and other
options (436, 437).
We must find appropriate and acceptable alternatives to the
ICU to care for dying patients. We must re-examine practices
such as 1) admitting patients to the ICU because ward attending physicians or hospitalists are uncomfortable caring for the
patient on the ward, 2) placing dying or moribund patients on
life support simply to prolong life in the ICU under the argument of doing everything, but in the process adding to the
suffering of the patients and their families without any clear
benefits, and 3) obtaining blanket consent upon ICU admission to receive a series of life-supportive interventions, which
some patients probably would not accept if they were fully
informed about each intervention and other alternatives such
as end-of-life or palliative care (438).

CONCLUSION
Although these are administrative guidelines, the subjects
addressed encompass complex ethical and medico-legal
aspects of patient care that affect daily clinical practice. A
limited amount of high-quality evidence made it difficult to
answer all the questions raised related to ICU ADT, and other
processes. After an arduous process of appraising the literature
and generating recommendations, it is certain that extensive
research is needed to address many specific dilemmas at all levels. Despite these limitations, the members of the Task Force
believe that these recommendations provide a comprehensive
framework for guiding practitioners in making informed decisions during the ADT process, as well as in resolving issues of
nonbeneficial treatment and rationing.
The decision to admit to the ICU can be very easy when
resources are abundant or very difficult when limited. Scarce
resources may threaten or impede the allocation of critical care
services to patients; misusing these resources can aggravate the
problem. The ICU should be reserved for critically ill patients
who require life-supportive therapies from a trained team of
healthcare providers; however, we cannot ignore our responsibility outside the boundaries of these units. We need to further
develop preventive strategies to reduce the burden of critical
illness, educate our noncritical care colleagues about these
interventions, and improve our outreach, developing early
identification and intervention systems.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We would like to thank Ms. Sunita Patterson for her aid in
the preparation of the article. We would like to also thank the
members of all the previous admission, discharge, and triage
task forces for their preliminary contributions (Appendix
6, Supplemental Digital Content 6, http://links.lww.com/
CCM/B905).
The members of the Task Force acknowledge the limitations of these guidelines. As a result of the vast amount of
medical and healthcare management information to consider,
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constraints to evaluate the published and rapidly available new


evidence, human fallibility and fast progress among others, the
reader has to use his own judgment on how best apply our suggestions and recommendations. Therefore, neither the Society
of Critical Care Medicine nor the authors of this document
assume responsibility for any injury to individuals as a result
of the use of this guide.

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August 2016 Volume 44 Number 8

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