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Critical Care Unit Organizational and Personnel Factors Impact Cardiac Arrest Prevention and Rescue in the Pediatric Cardiac Population. Pediatr Crit Care Med 2022 Apr 01;23(4):255-267

Date

01/13/2022

Pubmed ID

35020714

DOI

10.1097/PCC.0000000000002892

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85129780377 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   13 Citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Patient-level factors related to cardiac arrest in the pediatric cardiac population are well understood but may be unmodifiable. The impact of cardiac ICU organizational and personnel factors on cardiac arrest rates and outcomes remains unknown. We sought to better understand the association between these potentially modifiable organizational and personnel factors on cardiac arrest prevention and rescue.

DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium registry.

SETTING: Pediatric cardiac ICUs.

PATIENTS: All cardiac ICU admissions were evaluated for cardiac arrest and survival outcomes.

INTERVENTIONS: None.

MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Successful prevention was defined as the proportion of admissions with no cardiac arrest (inverse of cardiac arrest incidence). Rescue was the proportion of patients surviving to cardiac ICU discharge after cardiac arrest. Cardiac ICU organizational and personnel factors were captured via site questionnaires. The associations between organizational and personnel factors and prevention/rescue were analyzed using Fine-Gray and multinomial regression, respectively, accounting for clustering within hospitals. We analyzed 54,521 cardiac ICU admissions (29 hospitals) with 1,398 cardiac arrest events (2.5%) between August 1, 2014, and March 5, 2019. For both surgical and medical admissions, lower average daily cardiac ICU occupancy was associated with better cardiac arrest prevention. Better rescue for medical admissions was observed for higher registered nursing hours per patient day and lower proportions of "part time" cardiac ICU physician staff (< 6 service weeks/yr). Increased registered nurse experience was associated with better rescue for surgical admissions. Increased proportion of critical care certified nurses, full-time intensivists with critical care fellowship training, dedicated respiratory therapists, quality/safety resources, and annual cardiac ICU admission volume were not associated with improved prevention or rescue.

CONCLUSIONS: Our multi-institutional analysis identified cardiac ICU bed occupancy, registered nurse experience, and physician staffing as potentially important factors associated with cardiac arrest prevention and rescue. Recognizing the limitations of measuring these variables cross-sectionally, additional studies are needed to further investigate these organizational and personnel factors, their interrelationships, and how hospitals can modify structure to improve cardiac arrest outcomes.

Author List

Lasa JJ, Banerjee M, Zhang W, Bailly DK, Sasaki J, Bertrandt R, Raymond TT, Olive MK, Smith A, Alten J, Gaies M

Author

Rebecca Ann Bertrandt MD Associate Professor in the Pediatrics department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Child
Critical Care
Heart Arrest
Humans
Intensive Care Units
Intensive Care Units, Pediatric
Personnel Staffing and Scheduling
Retrospective Studies