Pediatric Chronic Critical Illness: Validation, Prevalence, and Impact in a Children's Hospital.

2021 
Objectives Large populations of chronically critically ill patients test the critical care system's resource utilization ability. Defining and tracking this group is necessary for census predictions. Design Retrospective cohort analysis. Settings Tertiary academic center in United States. Patients Patients admitted to PICU or neonatal ICU. Interventions None. Measurements and main results Demographics and resource utilization variables were sampled in PICU, intermediate care unit, cardiovascular ICU, and neonatal ICU on 3 random days in 3 consecutive months. The attendings' perception of pediatric chronic critical illness was contrasted to Shapiro's definition of chronic critical care criteria. Each unit's active and maximal capacity census was computed: the occurrence rate of pediatric chronic critical illness was 34%, the prevalence was 44.5%, and the tolerance, or percentage pediatric chronic critical illness patients to all available beds, was 36.8%. The median length of stay for the nonpatients with pediatric critical care illness to patients with pediatric critical care illness was 9 versus 46 days (1/5.1). The attending's decision was 58 times more concordant with the criteria. Pediatric chronic critical illness bed occupancy was 40.6% in PICU, 97.2% in intermediate care unit, 47.8% in cardiovascular ICU, and 33.9% in neonatal ICU. Conclusions Pediatric chronic critical illness patients occupied more than one third of the ICU beds and have five times longer stay. This mounting load needs to be uniformly defined, addressed at regional and national levels, and considered in the current pandemic planning.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []