(Press-News.org) Intensive care units (ICUs) that implemented a telemedicine intervention that included offsite electronic monitoring of processes and detection of nonadherence to best practices had lower hospital and ICU mortality, lower rates of preventable complications, and shorter hospital and ICU lengths of stay, according to a study that will appear in the June 1 issue of JAMA. The study is being published early online to coincide with its presentation at a meeting of the American Thoracic Society
"Patient needs and societal costs of adult critical care have increased as predicted from population-based models, and more efficient methods of delivery of care are needed. A tele-intensive care unit is a promising technological approach designed to systematically alter processes of care that effect outcomes. Tele-ICU can be defined as the provision of care to critically ill patients by health care professionals located remotely. Tele-ICU clinicians use audio, video, and electronic links to assist bedside caregivers in monitoring patients, to oversee best practice adherence, and to help create and execute care plans. Tele-ICU programs have the potential to target processes that are associated with better outcomes including shorter response times to alarms and abnormal laboratory values, more rapid initiation of life-saving therapies, and higher rates of adherence to critical care best practices," according to background information in the article.
To examine which tele-ICU-related process changes are associated with better outcomes, Craig M. Lilly, M.D., of the University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Mass., and colleagues evaluated the association of a tele-ICU intervention with the risk of dying in the hospital and length of stay and the relationship of best practice adherence and preventable complications to these outcomes. The study, performed from April 2005 through September 2007, included 6,290 adults admitted to any of 7 ICUs (3 medical, 3 surgical, and 1 mixed cardiovascular) on 2 campuses of an 834-bed academic medical center.
The off-site tele-ICU team included an intensivist and used tele-ICU workstations. Among the responsibilities of the team were reviewing the care of individual patients; performing real-time audits of best practice adherence; monitoring system-generated electronic alerts; auditing bedside clinician responses to in-room alarms; and intervening when the responses of bedside clinicians were delayed and patients were deemed physiologically unstable. The off-site team had the ability to communicate with bedside clinicians or directly manage patients by recording clinician orders for tests, treatments, consultations, and management of life-support devices.
After an analysis of the data from the study period, the researchers found that the hospital mortality rate was 13.6 percent during the preintervention period compared with 11.8 percent during the tele-ICU intervention. The ICU mortality rate was 10.7 percent for the preintervention group and 8.6 percent for the tele-ICU group. The length of hospital stay was 13.3 days in the preintervention group and 9.8 days in the tele-ICU group, and length of ICU stay was 6.4 days in the preintervention group and 4.5 days in the tele-ICU group.
The tele-ICU intervention period compared with the preintervention period was associated with higher rates of best clinical practice adherence for the prevention of deep vein thrombosis (99 percent vs. 85 percent), prevention of stress ulcers (96 percent vs. 83 percent), best practice adherence for cardiovascular protection (99 percent vs. 80 percent), prevention of ventilator-associated pneumonia (52 percent vs. 33 percent), and lower rates of preventable complications (1.6 percent vs. 13 percent for ventilator-associated pneumonia and 0.6 percent vs. 1.0 percent for catheter-related blood stream infection). The results for medical, surgical, and cardiovascular ICUs were similar.
For the tele-ICU group compared with the preintervention group, the fraction of patients requiring mechanical ventilation was significantly lower and the duration of mechanical ventilation was significantly shorter. Also, patients in the tele-ICU group were 8 percent more likely to go home, 6 percent less likely to go to rehabilitation or to a long-term care facility, and 2 percent more likely to go to a skilled nursing facility than patients in the preintervention group.
"In conclusion, an adult tele-ICU intervention at an academic medical center that had been previously well staffed with a dedicated intensivist model and had robust best practice programs in place before the intervention was associated with lower mortality and shorter lengths of stay. Only part of these associations could be attributed to following best practice guidelines and lower rates of preventable complications. This suggests that there are benefits of a tele-ICU intervention beyond what is provided by daytime bedside intensivist staffing and traditional approaches to quality improvement …", the authors write.
(JAMA. 2011;305[21]doi:10.1001/JAMA.2011.697; Available pre-embargo to the media at www.jamamedia.org)
Editor's Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.
Editorial: The Use and Misuse of ICU Telemedicine
In an accompanying editorial, Jeremy M. Kahn, M.D., M.S., of the University of Pittsburgh, writes that this study "provides important direction for how to best apply telemedicine in intensive care."
"Telemedicine alone does not equate to quality improvement but is merely a tool for quality improvement. Accordingly, a successful telemedicine program will follow the basic tenets of quality improvement: performing a detailed needs assessment, assessing the barriers to practice change, prioritizing specific projects, introducing effective strategies for improvement, and measuring the results in a stepwise fashion. Similar to traditional quality improvement, an approach in which this technology is introduced without setting specific quality goals and defining clear quality improvement processes is likely to fail. Instead, it is important to define specific quality deficiencies in the target ICUs, and then design the telemedicine intervention specifically to address those deficiencies, akin to other types of quality improvement."
###
(JAMA. 2011;305[21] doi:10.1001/JAMA.2011.716; Available pre-embargo to the media at www.jamamedia.org)
Editor's Note: Please see the article for additional information, including financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.
To contact Craig M. Lilly, M.D., call Jim Fessenden at 508-856-2000 or email james.fessenden@umassmed.edu. To contact editorial author Jeremy M. Kahn, M.D., M.S., call Wendy Zellner at 412-586-9777 or email zellnerwl@upmc.edu.
Implementation of telemedicine intervention in ICUs associated with better outcomes for patients
2011-05-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Tale of 2 mice pinpoints major factor for insulin resistance
2011-05-17
BOSTON – May 16, 2011 – The road to type 2 diabetes is paved with insulin resistance, a condition often associated with obesity in which the hormone begins to fail at its job helping to convert sugars to energy. Researchers at Joslin Diabetes Center have now identified an enzyme called PKC-delta as an important molecular modifier for development of insulin resistance, diabetes and fatty liver in mice. They also have found evidence suggesting a similar role for the enzyme in humans, making PKC-delta a promising new target for drugs for diabetes and related ailments.
Investigators ...
Clues to calming a cytokine storm
2011-05-17
By analyzing complex interactions of the immune system in an animal study, pediatric researchers have found potential tools for controlling a life-threatening condition called a cytokine storm that may strike children who have juvenile arthritis and other autoimmune diseases.
In a cytokine storm, the body's immune system rages out of control, resulting in overwhelming inflammation, rapid organ failure and death if not quickly diagnosed and treated. In addition to children with juvenile arthritis, patients with lupus or Epstein-Barr virus infection may also suffer this ...
T'ai chi helps prevent falls and improve mental health in the elderly
2011-05-17
T'ai chi has particular health benefits for older people, including helping to prevent falls and improving mental wellbeing, reveals a review published ahead of print in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
But the Chinese martial art widely practised for its health benefits does not help improve the symptoms of cancer or rheumatoid arthritis and the evidence is contradictory for many other health conditions and symptoms.
The effectiveness of t'ai chi for a variety of medical conditions and symptoms has been assessed in several studies and reviews, but their findings ...
Medical schools failing to teach the necessary legal skills to practice medicine
2011-05-17
Most medical students feel they lack the skills and legal knowledge required to challenge poor clinical practice and promote better patient care, reveals research published ahead of print in the Journal of Medical Ethics.
This suggests more time and emphasis needs to be put on legal skills in the formal medical curriculum and that these need to be practised and honed during clinical training, the authors say.
The authors surveyed 1,154 first, second and final year medical students at two UK medical schools on their knowledge and understanding of medico-legal rules and ...
Young drivers who take risks on the road have a greater risk of mental health problems
2011-05-17
Young adults who take risks when driving are more likely to experience psychological distress, including mental health problems such as anxiety and depression, reveals research published ahead of print in Injury Prevention.
Young drivers have more accidents and are more likely to be involved in a crash in which someone dies than older drivers, and risky behaviour is known to contribute to crashes involving young novice drivers.
Psychological distress, such as depression and anxiety, has been linked to risky behaviour in adolescents, including unprotected sex, smoking ...
Obese patients at much greater risk for costly surgical-site infections
2011-05-17
Obese patients undergoing colon surgery are 60 percent more likely to develop dangerous and costly surgical-site infections than their normal-weight counterparts, new Johns Hopkins research suggests.
These infections, according to findings published in the journal Archives of Surgery, cost an average of $17,000 more per patient, extend hospital stays and leave patients at a three-times greater risk of hospital readmission.
"Obesity is a leading risk factor for surgical-site infections, and those infections truly tax the health care system," says Elizabeth C. Wick, M.D., ...
Study links obesity to increased risk of developing postoperative infection following colon surgery
2011-05-17
Obese patients appear to have a significantly increased risk of developing a surgical site infection after colectomy (procedure involving either partial or full removal of the colon), and the presence of infection increases the cost associated with the procedure, according to a report published online today that will appear in the September issue of Archives of Surgery, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Surgical site infection (SSI) is considered to be one of the best available measures of quality in surgery, and health care centers are starting to be financially penalized ...
Patients referred to dermatologists skin lesions evaluations also found to have other skin cancers
2011-05-17
Among patients referred by non-dermatologists to dermatologists for evaluation of skin lesions suspected of being malignant, only apparently one-fifth were found to be cancerous, although dermatologists identified and biopsied other incidental lesions, approximately half of which were malignant, according to a report in the May issue of Archives of Dermatology, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
"More than one million skin cancers are diagnosed annually in the United States , with one in five Americans developing skin cancer during their lifetime," the authors write as ...
Reminding surgical staff of phlebotomy costs appears to affect utilization
2011-05-17
Surgical house staff and attending physicians who are reminded about the charges for ordering daily blood drawing for routine blood work appear to reduce the amount of routine blood tests ordered and the charges for these laboratory tests, according to a report in the May issue of Archives of Surgery, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
"The use of laboratory tests has been rapidly increasing over the past few decades to the point where phlebotomy is a substantial proportion of hospital expenditure, and much of it is unwarranted," state the authors. As background, they ...
Objective evidence of skin infestation lacking in patients with diagnosis of delusional infestation
2011-05-17
Among patients with a diagnosis of delusional skin infestation, neither biopsies nor patient-provided specimens provided objective evidence of skin infestation, according to a report posted online today that will be published in the September issue of Archives of Dermatology, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Delusional infestation is a condition in which patients steadfastly yet mistakenly believe that pathogens are infesting their skin. Sometimes, patients believe their skin is literally crawling with bugs, worms, or germs, which is also known as "delusions of parasitosis." ...