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1.
Crit Care Resusc ; 26(1): 47-53, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38690191

RESUMO

Introduction: Victoria, Australia provides a centralised state ECMO service, supported by ambulance retrieval. Equity of access to this service has not been previously described. Objective: Describe the characteristics of ECMO recipients and quantify geographical and socioeconomic influence on access. Design: Retrospective observational study with spatial mapping. Participants and setting: Adult (≥18 years) ECMO recipients from July 2016-June 2022. Data from administrative Victorian Admissions Episodes Database analysed in conjunction with Australian Urban Research Infrastructure Network population data and choropleth mapping. Presumed ECMO modes were inferred from cardiopulmonary bypass and pre-hospital cardiac arrest codes. Spatial autoregressive models including Moran's test used for spatial lag testing. Outcomes: Demographics and outcomes of ECMO recipients; ECMO incidence by patient residence (Statistical-Area Level 2, SA-2) and Index of Relative Socioeconomic Advantage and Disadvantage (IRSAD); and ECMO utilisation adjusted for patient factors and linear distance from the central ECMO referral site. Results: 631 adults received ECMO over 6 years, after exclusion of paediatric (n = 242), duplicate (n = 135), and interstate or incomplete (n = 72) records. Mean age was 51.8 years, and 68.8 % were male. Overall ECMO incidence was 3.00 ± 3.95 per 105 population. 135 (21.4 %) were presumed VA-ECMO, 59 (9.3 %) presumed ECPR, and 437 (69.3 %) presumed VV-ECMO. Spatial lag was non-significant after adjusting for patient characteristics. Distance from the central referral site (dy/dx = 0.19, 95% CI -0.41-0.04, p = 0.105) and IRSAD score (dy/dx = 0.17, 95% CI -0.19-0.53, p = 0.359) did not predict ECMO utilisation. Conclusion: Victorian ECMO incidence rates were low. We did not find evidence of inequity of access to ECMO irrespective of regional area or socioeconomic status.

2.
Health Inf Manag ; : 18333583221107713, 2022 Jun 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35676098

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Sepsis is the world's leading cause of death and its detection from a range of data and coding sources, consistent with consensus clinical definition, is desirable. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the performance of three coding definitions (explicit, implicit, and newly proposed synchronous method) for sepsis derived from administrative data compared to a clinical reference standard. METHOD: Extraction of administrative coded data from Australian metropolitan teaching hospital with 25,000 annual overnight admissions compared to clinical review of medical records; 313 (27.9%) randomly selected adult multi-day stay hospital separations from 1,123 separations with acute infection during July 2019. Estimated prevalence and performance metrics, including positive (PPV) and negative predictive values (NPV), and area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (ROC). RESULTS: Clinical prevalence of sepsis was estimated at 10.7 (95% CI = 10.3-11.3) per 100 separations, and mortality rate of 11.6 (95% CI = 10.3-13.0) per 100 sepsis separations. Explicit method for case detection had high PPV (93.2%) but low NPV (55.8%) compared to the standard implicit method (74.1 and 66.3%, respectively) and proposed synchronous method (80.4% and 80.0%) compared to a standard clinical case definition. ROC for each method: 0.618 (95% CI = 0.538-0.654), 0.698 (95% CI = 0.648-0.748), and 0.802 (95% CI = 0.757-0.846), respectively. CONCLUSION: In hospitalised Australian patients with community-onset sepsis, the explicit method for sepsis case detection underestimated prevalence. Implicit methods were consistent with consensus definition for sepsis, and proposed synchronous method had better performance.

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