Publication | Open Access
The Effect of Multidisciplinary Care Teams on Intensive Care Unit Mortality
504
Citations
53
References
2010
Year
Critically ill patients are medically complex and may benefit from a multidisciplinary approach to care. The study used a population‑based retrospective cohort of 107,324 patients from 112 Pennsylvania hospitals (2004‑2006) and multivariate logistic regression to assess the impact of daily multidisciplinary rounds on 30‑day mortality. Multidisciplinary care was linked to a 16 % reduction in 30‑day mortality (OR 0.84), with the greatest benefit in high‑intensity staffed ICUs (OR 0.78) and consistent across sepsis, ventilation, and severe illness subgroups.
<h3>Background</h3> Critically ill patients are medically complex and may benefit from a multidisciplinary approach to care. <h3>Methods</h3> We conducted a population-based retrospective cohort study of medical patients admitted to Pennsylvania acute care hospitals (N = 169) from July 1, 2004, to June 30, 2006, linking a statewide hospital organizational survey to hospital discharge data. Multivariate logistic regression was used to determine the independent relationship between daily multidisciplinary rounds and 30-day mortality. <h3>Results</h3> A total of 112 hospitals and 107 324 patients were included in the final analysis. Overall 30-day mortality was 18.3%. After adjusting for patient and hospital characteristics, multidisciplinary care was associated with significant reductions in the odds of death (odds ratio [OR], 0.84; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.76-0.93 [<i>P</i> = .001]). When stratifying by intensivist physician staffing, the lowest odds of death were in intensive care units (ICUs) with high-intensity physician staffing and multidisciplinary care teams (OR, 0.78; 95% CI, 0.68-0.89 [<i>P</i> < .001]), followed by ICUs with low-intensity physician staffing and multidisciplinary care teams (OR, 0.88; 95% CI, 0.79-0.97 [<i>P</i> = .01]), compared with hospitals with low-intensity physician staffing but without multidisciplinary care teams. The effects of multidisciplinary care were consistent across key subgroups including patients with sepsis, patients requiring invasive mechanical ventilation, and patients in the highest quartile of severity of illness. <h3>Conclusions</h3> Daily rounds by a multidisciplinary team are associated with lower mortality among medical ICU patients. The survival benefit of intensivist physician staffing is in part explained by the presence of multidisciplinary teams in high-intensity physician-staffed ICUs.
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