Mortality and Length of Stay Implications of Deterioration-Associated Transfer to the Intensive Care Unit over Different Time Frames

Background: Quality improvement initiatives in the acute care setting often target reduction of mortality and length of stay (LOS). Unplanned care escalations are associated with increased mortality risk and prolonged LOS, but may be precipitated by different factors, including appropriate triage, b...

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Main Authors: Kathy W Belk, Joseph Beals, Samantha J McInnis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-01-01
Series:Health Services Insights
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/11786329241312877
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author Kathy W Belk
Joseph Beals
Samantha J McInnis
author_facet Kathy W Belk
Joseph Beals
Samantha J McInnis
author_sort Kathy W Belk
collection DOAJ
description Background: Quality improvement initiatives in the acute care setting often target reduction of mortality and length of stay (LOS). Unplanned care escalations are associated with increased mortality risk and prolonged LOS, but may be precipitated by different factors, including appropriate triage, bed availability, and post-admission deterioration. Objectives: This work evaluates different transfer timeframes to quantify the impact of deterioration-associated unplanned transfers to intensive care (ICU) on mortality and LOS, informing evidence-based interventions to improve patient care. Design: This retrospective analysis examined 519 181 adult inpatients discharged from 15 hospitals in the United States. A propensity matched cohort analysis compared mortality and overall hospital LOS for patients admitted to routine and intermediate care units who did and did not have an unplanned ICU transfer within 12, 12-48, or ⩾48 hours from admission. Methods: Population cohorts were matched on age, sex, admitting unit type, admission type, and admission acuity. Multivariable regression analysis was used to estimate the impact of unplanned transfer on mortality and LOS. Sensitivity sub-analyses compared direct ICU admissions to unplanned ICU transfers using the same transfer timeframes and endpoints. Results: Patients with unplanned transfers in each of three timeframes had statistically higher mortality rates and longer LOS than matched cohorts without unplanned transfer. Differences between cohorts was greatest in patients transferring ⩾48 hours post-admission for both mortality (25.1% vs 1.9%, P  < .0001) and LOS ( x¯ = 14.7 vs 5.3, P  < .0001). Multivariate analysis showed unplanned ICU transfer significantly increased odds of mortality and prolonged LOS, with later transfers having the most profound influence (19-fold increase in mortality and 2-fold increase in LOS). Sensitivity analyses found a statistically significant increase in mortality and LOS associated with unplanned ICU transfer across all three timeframes. Conclusion: The association of later transfers with elevated mortality and LOS underscores the importance of timely intervention on patient deterioration.
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spelling doaj-art-735575ef6b544eeda9c10e810f8626e02025-01-18T12:03:24ZengSAGE PublishingHealth Services Insights1178-63292025-01-011810.1177/11786329241312877Mortality and Length of Stay Implications of Deterioration-Associated Transfer to the Intensive Care Unit over Different Time FramesKathy W Belk0Joseph Beals1Samantha J McInnis2Health Clarity Solutions, Mooresville, NC, USAHealth Clarity Solutions, Mooresville, NC, USASpacelabs Healthcare, Snoqualmie, WA, USABackground: Quality improvement initiatives in the acute care setting often target reduction of mortality and length of stay (LOS). Unplanned care escalations are associated with increased mortality risk and prolonged LOS, but may be precipitated by different factors, including appropriate triage, bed availability, and post-admission deterioration. Objectives: This work evaluates different transfer timeframes to quantify the impact of deterioration-associated unplanned transfers to intensive care (ICU) on mortality and LOS, informing evidence-based interventions to improve patient care. Design: This retrospective analysis examined 519 181 adult inpatients discharged from 15 hospitals in the United States. A propensity matched cohort analysis compared mortality and overall hospital LOS for patients admitted to routine and intermediate care units who did and did not have an unplanned ICU transfer within 12, 12-48, or ⩾48 hours from admission. Methods: Population cohorts were matched on age, sex, admitting unit type, admission type, and admission acuity. Multivariable regression analysis was used to estimate the impact of unplanned transfer on mortality and LOS. Sensitivity sub-analyses compared direct ICU admissions to unplanned ICU transfers using the same transfer timeframes and endpoints. Results: Patients with unplanned transfers in each of three timeframes had statistically higher mortality rates and longer LOS than matched cohorts without unplanned transfer. Differences between cohorts was greatest in patients transferring ⩾48 hours post-admission for both mortality (25.1% vs 1.9%, P  < .0001) and LOS ( x¯ = 14.7 vs 5.3, P  < .0001). Multivariate analysis showed unplanned ICU transfer significantly increased odds of mortality and prolonged LOS, with later transfers having the most profound influence (19-fold increase in mortality and 2-fold increase in LOS). Sensitivity analyses found a statistically significant increase in mortality and LOS associated with unplanned ICU transfer across all three timeframes. Conclusion: The association of later transfers with elevated mortality and LOS underscores the importance of timely intervention on patient deterioration.https://doi.org/10.1177/11786329241312877
spellingShingle Kathy W Belk
Joseph Beals
Samantha J McInnis
Mortality and Length of Stay Implications of Deterioration-Associated Transfer to the Intensive Care Unit over Different Time Frames
Health Services Insights
title Mortality and Length of Stay Implications of Deterioration-Associated Transfer to the Intensive Care Unit over Different Time Frames
title_full Mortality and Length of Stay Implications of Deterioration-Associated Transfer to the Intensive Care Unit over Different Time Frames
title_fullStr Mortality and Length of Stay Implications of Deterioration-Associated Transfer to the Intensive Care Unit over Different Time Frames
title_full_unstemmed Mortality and Length of Stay Implications of Deterioration-Associated Transfer to the Intensive Care Unit over Different Time Frames
title_short Mortality and Length of Stay Implications of Deterioration-Associated Transfer to the Intensive Care Unit over Different Time Frames
title_sort mortality and length of stay implications of deterioration associated transfer to the intensive care unit over different time frames
url https://doi.org/10.1177/11786329241312877
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