Physicians' perceptions and attitudes regarding inappropriate admissions and resource allocation in the intensive care setting.

BACKGROUND Physicians' perceptions regarding intensive care unit (ICU) resource allocation and the problem of inappropriate admissions are unknown. METHODS We carried out an anonymous, self-administered questionnaire survey to assess the perceptions and attitudes of ICU physicians at all 20 ICUs in Milan, Italy, regarding inappropriate admissions and resource allocation. RESULTS Eighty-seven percent (225/259) of physicians responded. Inappropriate admissions were acknowledged by 86% of respondents. The reasons given were clinical doubt (33%); limited decision time (32%); assessment error (25%); pressure from superiors (13%), referring clinician (11%) or family (5%); threat of legal action (5%); and an economically advantageous 'Diagnosis Related Group' (1%). Respondents reported being pressurized to make more 'productive' use of ICU beds by Unit heads (frequently 16%), hospital management (frequently 10%) and colleagues (frequently 4%). Five percent reported refusing appropriate admissions following 'indications' not to admit financially disadvantageous cases. Admissions after elective surgery prioritized patients from profitable surgical departments: frequently for 6% of respondents and occasionally for 15%. Sixty-seven percent said they frequently received requests for appropriate admissions when no beds were available. This was considered sufficient reason to withdraw treatment from patients with lower survival probability (sometimes 21%) or for whom nothing more could be done (sometimes 51%, frequently 11%). CONCLUSIONS Inappropriate ICU admissions were perceived as a common event but were mainly attributed to difficulties in assessing suitability. Physicians were aware that their decisions were often influenced by factors other than medical necessity. Economic influences were perceived as limited but not negligible. Decisions to forgo treatment could be influenced by the need to admit other patients.

[1]  P. Levin,et al.  The process of intensive care triage , 2001, Intensive Care Medicine.

[2]  D. Goldhill,et al.  Intensive care admission decisions for a patient with limited survival prospects: a questionnaire and database analysis , 2004, Intensive Care Medicine.

[3]  D. Cook,et al.  The sound of silence: rationing resources for critically ill patients , 1999, Critical care.

[4]  M. Osborne Physician decisions regarding life support in the intensive care unit. , 1992, Chest.

[5]  G. Park,et al.  Stress in UK intensive care unit doctors. , 2002, British journal of anaesthesia.

[6]  Sylvie Chevret,et al.  Compliance with triage to intensive care recommendations , 2001, Critical care medicine.

[7]  Thomas V Perneger,et al.  National questionnaire survey on what influences doctors' decisions about admission to intensive care , 2004, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[8]  M. Antonelli,et al.  Challenges in end-of-life care in the ICU , 2004, Intensive Care Medicine.

[9]  Douglas K. Martin,et al.  Access to intensive care unit beds for neurosurgery patients: a qualitative case study , 2003, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[10]  A. Egol Guidelines for intensive care unit admission, discharge, and triage , 1999 .

[11]  J. Vincent,et al.  European attitudes towards ethical problems in intensive care medicine: Results of an ethical questionnaire , 2005, Intensive Care Medicine.

[12]  D. Angus,et al.  Improving care of the critically ill: institutional and health-care system approaches , 2004, The Lancet.

[13]  Douglas K. Martin,et al.  Priority setting in a hospital critical care unit: Qualitative case study* , 2003, Critical care medicine.

[14]  L. Aronne,et al.  The therapeutic efficacy of critical care units. Identifying subgroups of patients who benefit. , 1989, Archives of internal medicine.

[15]  F. Lemaire,et al.  Withholding and withdrawal of life support in intensive-care units in France: a prospective survey , 2001, The Lancet.

[16]  C. Sirio,et al.  Use of intensive care units for patients with low severity of illness. , 1998, Archives of internal medicine.

[17]  R. Bone,et al.  Analysis of indications for intensive care unit admission. Clinical efficacy assessment project: American College of Physicians. , 1993, Chest.

[18]  C. Durbin,et al.  Influence of political power, medical provincialism, and economic incentives on the rationing of surgical intensive care unit beds , 1992, Critical care medicine.

[19]  Jean-François Timsit,et al.  Triaging patients to the ICU: a pilot study of factors influencing admission decisions and patient outcomes , 2003, Intensive Care Medicine.

[20]  Klim McPherson,et al.  Mortality among appropriately referred patients refused admission to intensive-care units , 1997, The Lancet.

[21]  A. Hillman,et al.  How do financial incentives affect physicians' clinical decisions and the financial performance of health maintenance organizations? , 1989, The New England journal of medicine.

[22]  J. Shelhamer,et al.  Fair Allocation of Intensive Care Unit Resources , 1997 .

[23]  B. Armour,et al.  The effect of explicit financial incentives on physician behavior. , 2001, Archives of internal medicine.

[24]  A. Manara,et al.  Reasons for withdrawing treatment in patients receiving intensive care , 1998, Anaesthesia.

[25]  C. Sprung,et al.  Intensive care physicians’ attitudes concerning distribution of intensive care resources , 2004, Intensive Care Medicine.

[26]  R Barrera,et al.  Accuracy of predictions of survival at admission to the intensive care unit. , 2001, Journal of critical care.

[27]  A. Giannini,et al.  End-of-life decisions in intensive care units: attitudes of physicians in an Italian urban setting , 2003, Intensive Care Medicine.

[28]  D Teres Civilian triage in the intensive care unit: The ritual of the last bed , 1993, Critical care medicine.

[29]  K. Faber‐Langendoen The clinical management of dying patients receiving mechanical ventilation. A survey of physician practice. , 1994, Chest.

[30]  C. Sprung,et al.  Evaluation of triage decisions for intensive care admission. , 1999, Critical care medicine.

[31]  M. Danis,et al.  Physicians' responses to resource constraints. , 2005, Archives of internal medicine.

[32]  Bed rationing and allocation in the intensive care unit , 2001, Current opinion in critical care.

[33]  J. Szalados Access to critical care: medical rationing of a public right or privilege? , 2004, Critical care medicine.

[34]  C. B. Cohen Ethical Problems of Intensive Care , 1977, Anesthesiology.

[35]  Robert M. Nelson,et al.  Consensus Statement on the Triage of Critically III Patients , 1994 .

[36]  G. Rubenfeld,et al.  Can health care costs be reduced by limiting intensive care at the end of life? , 2002, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine.

[37]  S. Lemeshow,et al.  Resource utilization among intensive care patients. Managed care vs traditional insurance. , 1992, Archives of internal medicine.