Critical Care Explorations (Oct 2023)

Telemedicine Critical Care-Mediated Mortality Reductions in Lower-Performing Patient Diagnosis Groups: A Prospective, Before and After Study

  • Walter A. Boyle, MD,
  • Christopher M. Palmer, MD,
  • Lisa Konzen, BSN,
  • Bradley A. Fritz, MD, MSCI,
  • Jason White, BSN,
  • Michelle Simkins, RN, MPH,
  • Brian Dieffenderfer, MPH,
  • Ayesha Iqbal, MBBS, MPH,
  • Jill Bertrand, MSN,
  • Shelley Meyer, BSN, MBA,
  • Paul Kerby, MD,
  • Sara Buckman, MD, PharmD,
  • Vladimir Despotovic, MD,
  • Jim Kozlowski, MS,
  • Patricia Crimmins Reda, BSN,
  • Igor Zwir, PhD,
  • C. Charles Gu, PhD,
  • Uchenna R. Ofoma, MD,MS

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/CCE.0000000000000979
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 10
p. e0979

Abstract

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OBJECTIVES:. Studies evaluating telemedicine critical care (TCC) have shown mixed results. We prospectively evaluated the impact of TCC implementation on risk-adjusted mortality among patients stratified by pre-TCC performance. DESIGN:. Prospective, observational, before and after study. SETTING:. Three adult ICUs at an academic medical center. PATIENTS:. A total of 2,429 patients in the pre-TCC (January to June 2016) and 12,479 patients in the post-TCC (January 2017 to June 2019) periods. INTERVENTIONS:. TCC implementation which included an acuity-driven workflow targeting an identified “lower-performing” patient group, defined by ICU admission in an Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation diagnoses category with a pre-TCC standardized mortality ratio (SMR) of greater than 1.5. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:. The primary outcome was risk-adjusted hospital mortality. Risk-adjusted hospital length of stay (HLOS) was also studied. The SMR for the overall ICU population was 0.83 pre-TCC and 0.75 post-TCC, with risk-adjusted mortalities of 10.7% and 9.5% (p = 0.09). In the identified lower-performing patient group, which accounted for 12.6% (n = 307) of pre-TCC and 13.3% (n = 1671) of post-TCC ICU patients, SMR decreased from 1.61 (95% CI, 1.21–2.01) pre-TCC to 1.03 (95% CI, 0.91–1.15) post-TCC, and risk-adjusted mortality decreased from 26.4% to 16.9% (p < 0.001). In the remaining (“higher-performing”) patient group, there was no change in pre- versus post-TCC SMR (0.70 [0.59–0.81] vs 0.69 [0.64–0.73]) or risk-adjusted mortality (8.5% vs 8.4%, p = 0.86). There were no pre- to post-TCC differences in standardized HLOS ratio or risk-adjusted HLOS in the overall cohort or either performance group. CONCLUSIONS:. In well-staffed and overall higher-performing ICUs in an academic medical center, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation granularity allowed identification of a historically lower-performing patient group that experienced a striking TCC-associated reduction in SMR and risk-adjusted mortality. This study provides additional evidence for the relationship between pre-TCC performance and post-TCC improvement.