ICU Admission Discharge Triage Guidelines
ICU Admission Discharge Triage Guidelines
ICU Admission Discharge Triage Guidelines
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]
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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
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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
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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.
Certainty of
Evidence
Implications for
future research
High (A)
Moderate (B)
Strength of
recommendation
Strong (1)
Confidence in
Benefits definitively
recommendation
outweigh associated
costs and burdens
Meaning
Low (C)
Benefits worth
associated costs and
burdens
Uncertain balance of
benefits vs costs
and burdens
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.
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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.
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
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)
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Table 2.
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
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.
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
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
Ungraded
We suggest that every ICU have a written ADT policy, as an administrative best practice, to guide
appropriate patient placement
Ungraded
Ungraded
(Continued)
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Table 2.
Recommendations
Grade
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
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
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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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.
Level
Type of Patients
Nursing-to-Patient
Ratios
Interventions
Intermediate medical
unit (high-medium)
or level 2a
1:3
Telemetry (medium-low)
or level 1a
1:4
1:5
IV antibiotics, IV chemotherapy,
laboratory and radiographic
work, etc
1:1 to 1:2
If an institution does not have this capability, the patient should be admitted to the next highest level.
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Table 4.
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
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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:
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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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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:
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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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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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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).
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:
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:
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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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
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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).
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:
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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
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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Terminology
Recommendation:
We suggest using the term nonbeneficial treatment whenever clinicians consider further care futile (Ungraded).
Special Article
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).
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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
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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).
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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
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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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Further research is needed on all aspects of rationing critical care resources to narrow the current gaps in allocating
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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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