International variation in length of stay in intensive care units and the impact of patient-to-nurse ratios

Elsevier

Available online 4 June 2022, 103265

Intensive and Critical Care NursingHighlights•

This is the first and largest evaluation of ICU length of stay across 57 countries and 6 continents.

There is considerable heterogeneity in ICU length of stay and patient-to-nurse ratio worldwide.

This study found an increase in ICU length of stay to be associated with an increase in patient-to-nurse ratio.

This data opens to new research that investigates specific factors driving worldwide differences in ICU length of stay.

AbstractObjective

To assess variation in ICU length of stay between countries with varying patient-to-nurse ratios; to compare ICU length of stay of individual countries against an international benchmark.

Design

Secondary analysis of the DecubICUs trial (performed on 15 May 2018).

Setting

The study cohort included 12,794 adult ICU patients (57 countries). Only countries with minimally twenty patients discharged (or deceased) within 30 days of ICU admission were included.

Main outcome measure

Multivariate Cox regression was used to evaluate ICU length of stay, censored at 30 days, across countries and for patient-to-nurse ratio, adjusted for sex, age, admission type and Simplified Acute Physiology Score II. The resulting hazard ratios for countries, indicating longer or shorter length of stay than average, were plotted on a forest plot. Results by country were benchmarked against the overall length of stay using Kaplan-Meier curves.

Results

Patients had a median ICU length of stay of 11 days (interquartile range, 4–27). Hazard ratio by country ranged from minimally 0.42 (95% confidence interval 0.35–0.51) for Greece, to maximaly1.94 (1.28–2.93) for Lithuania. The hazard ratio for patient-to-nurse was 0.96 (0.94–0.98), indicating that higher patient-to-nurse ratio results in longer length of stay.

Conclusions

Despite adjustment for case-mix, we observed significant heterogeneity of ICU length of stay in-between countries, and a significantly longer length of stay when patient-to-nurse ratio increases. Future studies determining underlying characteristics of individual ICUs and broader organisation of healthcare infrastructure within countries may further explain the observed heterogeneity in ICU length of stay.

Keywords

Length of stay

Intensive care unit

Multivariate cox regression

International benchmark

Patient-to-nurse ratio

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