J Korean Soc Emerg Med.  2006 Apr;17(2):146-153.

Impact of Interhospital Transfer in Mortality of Critically Ill Patients

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Emergency Medicine, College of Medicine, Dankook University, Chunan, Korea. ksj@chosun,ac.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE: Interhospital transfer of critically ill patients is often necessary for optimal patient care. However it is known that transport of critically ill patients has been associated with high rate of potentially detrimental complications. This study was designed to determine whether mortality of critically ill patients with interhospital transfers is different from critically ill patients with direct admissions.
METHODS
The retrospective cohort study was conducted at an academic medical center with 3906 critically ill patients from 2003 to 2004, of whom 1652 were direct admissions and 2254 were interhospital transfers. Death within 48 hours in interhospital transfers and direct admissions were compared using univariate and multivariate regression analyses that adjusted for severity of illness. Severity of illness was measured using Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS) II and Charles comorbidity score. To measure hospital performance standardized mortality ratio (SMR) was calculated by dividing observed mortality by SAPS II-predicted mortality.
RESULTS
Death within 48 hours were not significantly higher for interhospital transfer patients than for directly admitted patients (7.5% vs 8.1%, p<0.05). But directly admitted patients had significantly higher SMR than transferred patients (0.94 vs 0.81, p=0.001). Finally, transferred patients with hepatic failure had significantly higher mortality rates (odds ratio=4.636) as compared with directly admitted patients, confirming the "transfer effect"for this patients' subgroup.
CONCLUSION
Admission source is not an important determinant of outcome.

Keyword

Critically ill patients; Hospital mortality; Interhospital transfer

MeSH Terms

Academic Medical Centers
Cohort Studies
Comorbidity
Critical Illness*
Hospital Mortality
Humans
Liver Failure
Mortality*
Patient Care
Physiology
Retrospective Studies
Full Text Links
  • JKSEM
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr