Revista Brasileira de Terapia Intensiva (Jun 2010)
A adequada comunicação entre os profissionais médicos reduz a mortalidade no centro de tratamento intensivo Appropriate medical professionals communication reduces intensive care unit mortality
Abstract
OBJETIVOS: A falha de comunicação entre os profissionais de saúde em centros de tratamento intensivo pode estar relacionada ao aumento de mortalidade dos pacientes criticamente doentes. Este estudo teve como objetivo avaliar se falhas de comunicação entre os médicos assistentes e os médicos rotineiros do centro de tratamento intensivo teriam impacto na morbidade e mortalidade dos pacientes críticos. MÉTODOS: Estudo de coorte incluindo pacientes não consecutivos admitidos no centro de tratamento intensivo durante 18 meses. Os pacientes foram divididos em 3 grupos conforme o hábito de comunicação de seus médicos assistentes com os médicos rotineiros: CD - comunicação diária da conduta (>75% dos dias); CE - comunicação eventual (25 a 75% dos dias); RC - rara comunicação (OBJECTIVES: Communication issues between healthcare professionals in intensive care units may be related to critically ill patients’ increased mortality. This study aimed to evaluate if communication issues involving assistant physicians and routine intensive care unit physicians would impact critically ill patients’ morbidity and mortality. METHODS: This was a cohort study that included non-consecutive patients admitted to the intensive care unit for 18 months. The patients were categorized in 3 groups according to their assistant doctors’ versus routine doctors communication uses: DC - daily communication during the stay (>75% of the days); EC - eventual communication (25 to 75% of the days); RC - rare communication (< 25% of the days). Demographic data, severity scores, reason for admission to the intensive care unit and interventions were recorded. The consequences of the medical professionals communication failures (delayed procedures, diagnostic tests, antibiotics, ventilatory weaning, vasopressors) and medical prescriptions inadequacies (no bed head elevation, no stress ulceration and deep venous thrombosis drug prophylaxis), and their relationship with the patients outcomes were analyzed. RESULTS: 792 patients were included, and categorized as follows: DC (n=529); EC (n=187) and RC (n=76). The mortality was increased in the RC patients group (26.3%) versus the remainder groups (DC = 13.6% and EC = 17.1%; p<0.05). A multivariate analysis showed that delayed antibiotics [RR 1.83 (CI95%: 1.36 -2.25)], delayed ventilatory weaning [RR 1.63 (CI95%: 1.25-2.04)] and no deep venous thrombosis prophylaxis [RR 1.98 (CI95%: 1.43 - 3.12)] contributed independently for the increased mortality. CONCLUSION: The failure in the assistant and routine intensive care doctors communication may increase the patients’ mortality, particularly due to delayed antibiotics and ventilation weaning, and lack of deep venous thrombosis prophylaxis prescription.
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