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Patients Denied Admission To Intensive Care
Because Of Doctors' Pessimism, Study Says
COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) causes
around 30,000 deaths a year in the UK and many patients
who have COPD attacks can benefit from assisted ventilation,
but they have to be admitted to an intensive care unit
(ICU) to be intubated.
Researchers studied results from 92 intensive care
and three respiratory high dependency units in the
UK that dealt with 832 patients aged 45 years and over
who had breathlessness, respiratory failure or change
in mental status due to a COPD attack, asthma or both.
Information gathered over an 18-month period from
a database covering 74% of UK ICUs said there was no
significant difference in outcomes when comparing units
that took part in the study and those that did not.
Overall, 517 (62%) patients survived to 180 days after
the incident, but clinicians prognoses were pessimistic,
predicting a survival rate of just 49%.
For the fifth of patients with the poorest prognosis
according to the clinician, the predicted survival
rate was 10% and the actual rate was 40%
The survival rates were 80% at discharge from ICU
or high dependency units, 70% at discharge from hospital
and 62% at 180 days after ICU admission.
The authors say: "Clinicians are generally pessimistic
about the survival of patients with exacerbations of
COPD and have particular problems in identifying those
with poor prognosis. Patients might therefore be inappropriately
excluded from intensive care and the chance of intubation
on the basis of a false prediction of futility."
In an accompanying editorial, US researchers point
to a scarcity of intensive care resources as a possible
explanation for these results.
They say that making decisions about admission to
intensive care is complex, especially in the UK and
southern Europe, where intensive care beds are often
lacking. And they call for further studies to determine
whether prognostic pessimism requires intervention
aimed at doctors or at underlying healthcare systems
that have inadequate provision of critical care services. |