BMC Health Services Research (Apr 2012)

Outcomes of prolonged mechanic ventilation: a discrimination model based on longitudinal health insurance and death certificate data

  • Lu Hsin-Ming,
  • Chen Likwang,
  • Wang Jung-Der,
  • Hung Mei-Chuan,
  • Lin Ming-Shian,
  • Yan Yuan-Horng,
  • Chen Cheng-Ren,
  • Fan Po-Sheng,
  • Huang Lynn,
  • Kuo Ken N

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-12-100
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 100

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background This study investigated prognosis among patients under prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV) through exploring the following issues: (1) post-PMV survival rates, (2) factors associated with survival after PMV, and (3) the number of days alive free of hospital stays requiring mechanical ventilation (MV) care after PMV. Methods This is a retrospective cohort study based on secondary analysis of prospectively collected data in the national health insurance system and governmental data on death registry in Taiwan. It used data for a nationally representative sample of 25,482 patients becoming under PMV (> = 21 days) during 1998-2003. We calculated survival rates for the 4 years after PMV, and adopted logistic regression to construct prediction models for 3-month, 6-month, 1-year, and 2-year survival, with data of 1998-2002 for model estimation and the 2003 data for examination of model performance. We estimated the number of days alive free of hospital stays requiring MV care in the immediate 4-year period after PMV, and contrasted patients who had low survival probability with all PMV patients. Results Among these patients, the 3-month survival rate was 51.4%, and the 1-year survival rate was 31.9%. Common health conditions with significant associations with poor survival included neoplasm, acute and unspecific renal failure, chronic renal failure, non-alcoholic liver disease, shock and septicaemia (odd ratio p Conclusions Neoplasm, acute and unspecific renal failure, shock, chronic renal failure, septicemia, and non-alcoholic liver disease are significantly associated with lower survival among PMV patients. Patients with anticipated death in a near future tend to spend most of the rest of their life staying in hospital using MV services. This calls for further research into assessing PMV care need among patients at different prognosis stages of diseases listed above.