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Critical care medicine · Mar 1992
Case ReportsInfluence of political power, medical provincialism, and economic incentives on the rationing of surgical intensive care unit beds.
- M F Marshall, K J Schwenzer, M Orsina, J C Fletcher, and C G Durbin.
- Center for Biomedical Ethics, University of Virginia Health Sciences Center, Charlottesville 22908.
- Crit. Care Med. 1992 Mar 1;20(3):387-94.
ObjectiveTo determine factors influencing rationing decisions in a surgical ICU during a temporary nursing shortage when two to six of the unit's 16 beds were closed.DesignBlinded, concurrent data collection, retrospective chart review.SettingSurgical ICU.PatientsAll patients (n = 308) for whom a surgical ICU bed was requested were studied during a 3-month period.Measurements And Main ResultsAdmitting patterns did not change and no attempts were made to limit admissions to more severely ill patients during times of the greatest shortage of surgical ICU beds. Contrary to findings in previous reports, the severity of illness of patients admitted to the surgical ICU decreased as bed availability and bed census decreased. Bed allocation across surgical services was influenced by factors other than medical suitability. Of major users, cardiothoracic surgery experienced the highest percentage (59%) of all patient admissions and lowest percentage (1.6%) of all denied admissions. General surgery experienced the lowest percentage (15%) of all admissions and highest percentage (10.4%) of all denied admissions, although these patients had the highest average Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE II) scores for all patients admitted (17.7) and for patients denied admission (15.8).ConclusionsSurgical attending physicians rarely used other open inhouse ICU beds when surgical ICU beds were unavailable. Political power, medical provincialism, and income maximization overrode medical suitability in the provision of critical care services.
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