BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to analyze the effects of a multidisciplinary program carried out in a chronic ventilator facility on disability, autonomy, and nursing needs of patients after a prolonged ICU stay. Secondary outcome measures were survival, weaning rate, chronic ventilator facility stay, and discharge destination. METHODS: Multidisciplinary assessment, clinical stabilization, weaning attempts, and a new Disabled Patients Autonomy Planning tool to assess daily care needs were investigated in 240 subjects in a chronic ventilator facility (52 subjects after cardiovascular surgery, 60 subjects with acute respiratory failure, 71 subjects with COPD, and 57 subjects with neurological disease). RESULTS: At admission, nursing needs, disability, and autonomy differed according to diagnosis (P<.001); weaned subjects had greater nursing needs (P<.001) and disability (P =.0014) than unweaned subjects. During the stay, 13.8% of the subjects died irrespective of diagnosis (P =.12);47%(P <.001) were weaned with significant differences (P <.007) by diagnosis. In the 207 surviving subjects, nursing needs increased as disability increased (r = 0.59, P <.001) and autonomy decreased (r = –0.66, P <.001); disability and autonomy were interrelated (r = 0.61, P <.001). Oxygen saturation, hypercapnia, dyspnea, disability, autonomy, and nursing needs significantly improved (all, P <.001). Fifty-nine percent of the subjects were discharged home. Subjects discharged to nursing homes presented mainly neurological diseases, being more disabled and less autonomous, with higher nursing needs (all, P <.04). Mechanical ventilation use and tracheostomy increased the probability of being discharged to a nursing home (odds ratio [OR] of 1.84, P =.04; OR 2.47, P =.003, respectively). Mortality was higher in subjects who were ventilated (OR 8.44, P <.001), male (OR 2.64, P =.01), elderly (P <.001), or malnourished (P =.01) and in subjects with low autonomy (P <.001), greater nursing needs (P =.002), and more severe disabilities (P =.04). CONCLUSIONS: A specialized tailored multidisciplinary program in subjects after an ICU stay contributed to recovery from disability, autonomy, and fewer nursing needs irrespective of diagnosis. Subjects discharged to a nursing home were the most severely disabled.

Effects of a multidisciplinary care program on disability, autonomy, and nursing needs in subjects recovering from acute respiratory failure in a chronic ventilator facility

Paneroni, Mara;
2014-01-01

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to analyze the effects of a multidisciplinary program carried out in a chronic ventilator facility on disability, autonomy, and nursing needs of patients after a prolonged ICU stay. Secondary outcome measures were survival, weaning rate, chronic ventilator facility stay, and discharge destination. METHODS: Multidisciplinary assessment, clinical stabilization, weaning attempts, and a new Disabled Patients Autonomy Planning tool to assess daily care needs were investigated in 240 subjects in a chronic ventilator facility (52 subjects after cardiovascular surgery, 60 subjects with acute respiratory failure, 71 subjects with COPD, and 57 subjects with neurological disease). RESULTS: At admission, nursing needs, disability, and autonomy differed according to diagnosis (P<.001); weaned subjects had greater nursing needs (P<.001) and disability (P =.0014) than unweaned subjects. During the stay, 13.8% of the subjects died irrespective of diagnosis (P =.12);47%(P <.001) were weaned with significant differences (P <.007) by diagnosis. In the 207 surviving subjects, nursing needs increased as disability increased (r = 0.59, P <.001) and autonomy decreased (r = –0.66, P <.001); disability and autonomy were interrelated (r = 0.61, P <.001). Oxygen saturation, hypercapnia, dyspnea, disability, autonomy, and nursing needs significantly improved (all, P <.001). Fifty-nine percent of the subjects were discharged home. Subjects discharged to nursing homes presented mainly neurological diseases, being more disabled and less autonomous, with higher nursing needs (all, P <.04). Mechanical ventilation use and tracheostomy increased the probability of being discharged to a nursing home (odds ratio [OR] of 1.84, P =.04; OR 2.47, P =.003, respectively). Mortality was higher in subjects who were ventilated (OR 8.44, P <.001), male (OR 2.64, P =.01), elderly (P <.001), or malnourished (P =.01) and in subjects with low autonomy (P <.001), greater nursing needs (P =.002), and more severe disabilities (P =.04). CONCLUSIONS: A specialized tailored multidisciplinary program in subjects after an ICU stay contributed to recovery from disability, autonomy, and fewer nursing needs irrespective of diagnosis. Subjects discharged to a nursing home were the most severely disabled.
2014
Chronic care facilities; COPD; Long-term hospital; Postsurgical; Prolonged mechanical ventilation; Weaning
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11562/988122
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