Effect of Admission and Discharge Times on Hospital Mortality in Patients With Sepsis

Objectives: 

To assess whether the time of admission/discharge time from the ICU and weekend admission are independently associated with hospital mortality in critically ill patients with sepsis.

Design: 

Retrospective study. Each 24-hour period (08:00 to 07:59 hr) was split into three time periods, defined as “day” (08:00 to 16:59 hr), “evening” (17:00 to 23:59 hr), and “night” (00:00 to 07:59 hr). Weekends were defined as 17:00 hours on Friday to 07:59 hours on Monday. Multivariate logistic regression models were conducted to assess the association between the ICU admission/discharge time, weekend admission, and hospital mortality.

Setting: 

Single-center ICUs in China.

Patients: 

Characteristics and clinical outcomes of 1,341 consecutive septic patients admitted to the emergency ICU, general ICU, or cardiovascular ICU in a tertiary teaching hospital were collected.

Interventions: 

None.

Measurements and Main Results: 

ICU mortality rates were 5.8%, 11.9%, and 10.6%, and hospital mortality rates were 7.3%, 15.6%, and 17.1% during the day, evening, and night time, respectively. Hospital mortality was adjusted for patient to nurse (P/N) ratio, disease severity, Charlson index, age, gender, mechanical ventilation, and shock. Notably, ICU admission time and weekend admission were not predictors of mortality after adjustment. The P/N ratio at admission was significantly associated with mortality (p < 0.05). The P/N ratio and compliance with the Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC) were significantly correlated. After risk adjustment for illness severity at time of ICU discharge and Charlson index, the time of discharge was no longer a significant predictor of mortality.

Conclusions: 

ICU admission/discharge time and weekend admission were not independent risk factors of hospital mortality in critically ill patients with sepsis. The P/N ratio at admission, which can affect the compliance rate with SSC, was a predictor of hospital survival. Unstable state on transfer from the ICU was the main risk factor for in-hospital death. These findings may have implications for the management of septic patients.

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