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  • CIDRAP - Crowded ICUs tied to higher risk of COVID-19 death

    Source: https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-pers...covid-19-death


    Crowded ICUs tied to higher risk of COVID-19 death
    Filed Under:
    COVID-19
    Mary Van Beusekom | News Writer | CIDRAP News
    | Jan 19, 2021


    COVID-19 patients admitted to intensive care units (ICUs) at US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals during peak coronavirus patient surges were twice as likely to die than those treated during low-demand periods, an observational study published today in JAMA Network Open suggests.
    VA researchers studied 8,516 COVID-19 patients, 94.1% of them men, admitted to ICUs at 88 veterans hospitals from Mar 1 to Aug 31, 2020, with 30 days of follow-up.
    Compared with COVID-19 patients treated in the ICU during times of low ICU demand (≤25%), those treated during times of 25% to 50% demand had an adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) of 0.99. But the aHR jumped to 1.19 when ICU demand was 50% to 75% and to 1.94 when demand was greater than 75%.
    The death rate did not increase with increasing ICU demand in patients treated in the noncritical setting. The overall all-cause death rate varied over time, ranging from a high of 25.0% in April to a low of 12.5% in July.
    Patient load was defined as the number of COVID-19 patients in the ICU compared with the typical ICU bed counts at each hospital, while ICU demand was defined as the mean number of coronavirus patients in the ICU during the patient's stay divided by the upper limit of COVID-19 patients in that unit. COVID-19 ICU loads ranged from 1% to more than 100%, at which point hospitals increased critical care bed capacity by repurposing other facility areas as ICUs.
    COVID-19 ICU patient loads varied over time, with prevalence rates at some hospitals peaking in March and others in July. The percentage of COVID-19 patients receiving care during times of low coronavirus ICU load (≤25%) increased over time, from a low of 51.0% in March to a peak of 91.8% in August.
    The percentage of coronavirus patients treated during times of peak COVID-19 ICU load (100% or higher) fell steadily, from 6.3% in March, to 1.1% in April, to 0% in May through August. The percentage of COVID-19 patients receiving care during times of high coronavirus ICU demand (higher than 75%) fell from 24.4% in March, to 20.2% in April, to 4.8% in May. It then increased to a peak of 17.4% in July before falling to 5.8% in August.
    The proportion of patients receiving care on general wards climbed after the beginning of the pandemic (55.2% in March) to a peak of 67.6% in July. Mean patient age was 67.9 years.

    Triage, tracking, coordination may ease strain

    The authors said that because higher COVID-19 patient ICU demand was associated with increased death rates both early (March to May) as well as later on in the pandemic (June to August), it suggests that overwhelmed hospitals were linked to increased coronavirus ICU death rates.
    "This cohort study found that although facilities augmented ICU capacity during the pandemic, strains on critical care capacity were associated with increased COVID-19 ICU mortality," they wrote.
    The researchers called for future research to elucidate the magnitude to which patient factors such as illness severity or hospital problems like understaffing contributed to the tie between COVID-19 ICU strain and poor outcomes in critically ill coronavirus patients and to determine if patients who would have normally been admitted to the ICU under nonpandemic conditions were instead admitted to a general ward when ICUs were overwhelmed by coronavirus patients.
    The authors also suggested that hospitals within a healthcare system or a geographic region work together to triage severely ill COVID-19 patients to facilities with higher ICU capacity to ease strain on other facilities. "Tracking COVID-19 ICU demand may be useful to hospital administrators and health officials as they coordinate COVID-19 admissions across hospitals to optimize outcomes for patients with this illness," they wrote.











  • #2
    More than 700 intensive care staff at nine hospitals were asked about their experiences for a study.

    Many hospital staff treating the sickest patients during the first wave of the pandemic were left traumatised by the experience, a study suggests.

    Researchers at King's College London asked 709 workers at nine intensive care units in England about how they were coping as the first wave eased.

    Nearly half reported symptoms of severe anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder or problem drinking.


    ...
    Victoria Sullivan, an intensive care nurse at Queen's Hospital in Romford, said she often can't sleep because she's thinking about what is happening at the hospital.

    Her worst moment was breaking the news of a death on the phone, she said, adding that the screams from the patient's relatives "will honestly stay with me forever".

    "Telling someone over the phone and all you can say is 'I'm really sorry', whilst they're crying their heart out, is quite traumatising," she said.

    "Although you're saying how sorry you are, in the back of your mind, you're also thinking: 'I've got three other patients I've got to go and see, the infusions need drawing up, and meds need to be given and a nurse needs support'.

    "The guilt is just too much"
    ...

    What is post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)?


    PTSD is an anxiety disorder caused by very stressful, frightening or distressing events.

    Someone with PTSD often relives the traumatic event through nightmares and flashbacks, and may experience feelings of isolation, irritability and guilt.

    They may also have problems sleeping, such as insomnia, and find concentrating difficult.

    These symptoms are often severe and persistent enough to have a significant impact on the person's day-to-day life.
    It is not just the quality of care that is affected by an overloaded system - the health and well being of those charged with caring for very ill patients is also a huge problem. We all have to wear a mask, handle it properly - by the straps and not touch the outside - and keep away from others to stop the spread.
    "The only security we have is our ability to adapt."

    Comment


    • kiwibird
      kiwibird commented
      Editing a comment
      And ventilation. If a car with the air conditioning on can have viable and infectious virus floating around for two hours after a mildy infected person has been in there - we have to assume that every room has contagious aerosols. Wear a mask in communal areas and open windows. Put filters over vents. Think about negative pressure rooms for everyone - not just those known to be infected. Your kind/irritating/diligent work mate might be a carrier. Have your lunch in your car or outside ...don't take your mask off when you go to the bathroom .... https://www.nature.com/articles/s415...MY4Brh0lLiYeZ8
      We are going to have to completely rethink our habits if we are going to stay safe if this virus is going to be around for years.

  • #3
    3,142 万 views, 10 万 likes, 2.1 万 loves, 1.2 万 comments, 30 万 shares, Facebook Watch Videos from Bloomberg Quicktake: Wearing a face mask does help if you do it properly. Seto Wing Hong of Hong Kong...


    This applies to the more rigid n95 and n99 as well as our cloth masks. Turn the cloth inside out when you put it in your pocket and then wash your hands.
    "The only security we have is our ability to adapt."

    Comment

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