A comparison of outcomes among hospital survivors with and without severe comorbidity admitted to the intensive care unit

Little is known about the experiences of patients with severe comorbidity discharged from Intensive Care Units (ICUs). This project aimed to determine the effects of an ICU stay for patients with severe comorbidity by comparing 1) quality of life (QOL), 2) the symptom profile of hospital survivors a...

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Main Authors: Williams, Teresa, McConigley, Ruth, Leslie, Gavin, Dobb, G., Phillips, M., Davies, Hugh, Aoun, Samar
Format: Journal Article
Published: Australian Society of Anaesthetists 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10019
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author Williams, Teresa
McConigley, Ruth
Leslie, Gavin
Dobb, G.
Phillips, M.
Davies, Hugh
Aoun, Samar
author_facet Williams, Teresa
McConigley, Ruth
Leslie, Gavin
Dobb, G.
Phillips, M.
Davies, Hugh
Aoun, Samar
author_sort Williams, Teresa
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Little is known about the experiences of patients with severe comorbidity discharged from Intensive Care Units (ICUs). This project aimed to determine the effects of an ICU stay for patients with severe comorbidity by comparing 1) quality of life (QOL), 2) the symptom profile of hospital survivors and 3) health service use after hospital discharge for patients admitted to ICU with and without severe comorbidity. A case-control study was used. Patients with severe comorbidity were matched to a contemporaneous cohort of ICU patients by age and severity of illness. Assessment tools were the Medical Outcome Study 36-item short-form and European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer QLQ-C15-PAL questionnaires for QOL and the Symptom Assessment Scale for symptom distress. A proportional odds assumption was performed using an ordinal regression model. The difference in QOL outcome was the dependent variable for each pair. Health service use after discharge from ICU was monitored with patient diaries. Patients aged 18+ years admitted to an ICU in a metropolitan teaching hospital between 2011 and 2012 were included. We recruited 30 cases and 30 controls. QOL improved over the six months after hospital discharge for patients with and without severe comorbidity (P <0.01) within the groups but there was no difference found between the groups (P >0.3). There was no difference in symptoms or health service use between patients with and without severe comorbidity. ICU admission for people with severe comorbidity can be appropriate to stabilise the patient's condition and is likely to be followed by some overall improvement over the six months after hospital discharge.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-100192017-01-30T11:16:20Z A comparison of outcomes among hospital survivors with and without severe comorbidity admitted to the intensive care unit Williams, Teresa McConigley, Ruth Leslie, Gavin Dobb, G. Phillips, M. Davies, Hugh Aoun, Samar Little is known about the experiences of patients with severe comorbidity discharged from Intensive Care Units (ICUs). This project aimed to determine the effects of an ICU stay for patients with severe comorbidity by comparing 1) quality of life (QOL), 2) the symptom profile of hospital survivors and 3) health service use after hospital discharge for patients admitted to ICU with and without severe comorbidity. A case-control study was used. Patients with severe comorbidity were matched to a contemporaneous cohort of ICU patients by age and severity of illness. Assessment tools were the Medical Outcome Study 36-item short-form and European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer QLQ-C15-PAL questionnaires for QOL and the Symptom Assessment Scale for symptom distress. A proportional odds assumption was performed using an ordinal regression model. The difference in QOL outcome was the dependent variable for each pair. Health service use after discharge from ICU was monitored with patient diaries. Patients aged 18+ years admitted to an ICU in a metropolitan teaching hospital between 2011 and 2012 were included. We recruited 30 cases and 30 controls. QOL improved over the six months after hospital discharge for patients with and without severe comorbidity (P <0.01) within the groups but there was no difference found between the groups (P >0.3). There was no difference in symptoms or health service use between patients with and without severe comorbidity. ICU admission for people with severe comorbidity can be appropriate to stabilise the patient's condition and is likely to be followed by some overall improvement over the six months after hospital discharge. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10019 Australian Society of Anaesthetists restricted
spellingShingle Williams, Teresa
McConigley, Ruth
Leslie, Gavin
Dobb, G.
Phillips, M.
Davies, Hugh
Aoun, Samar
A comparison of outcomes among hospital survivors with and without severe comorbidity admitted to the intensive care unit
title A comparison of outcomes among hospital survivors with and without severe comorbidity admitted to the intensive care unit
title_full A comparison of outcomes among hospital survivors with and without severe comorbidity admitted to the intensive care unit
title_fullStr A comparison of outcomes among hospital survivors with and without severe comorbidity admitted to the intensive care unit
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of outcomes among hospital survivors with and without severe comorbidity admitted to the intensive care unit
title_short A comparison of outcomes among hospital survivors with and without severe comorbidity admitted to the intensive care unit
title_sort comparison of outcomes among hospital survivors with and without severe comorbidity admitted to the intensive care unit
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10019