• Crit Care · Aug 2018

    Reassessing access to intensive care using an estimate of the population incidence of critical illness.

    • Allan Garland, Kendiss Olafson, Clare D Ramsey, Marina Yogendranc, and Randall Fransoo.
    • Department of Internal Medicine, University of Manitoba, 820 Sherbrook Street, Winnipeg, MB, R3A1R9, Canada. agarland@hsc.mb.ca.
    • Crit Care. 2018 Aug 20; 22 (1): 208.

    BackgroundThe consistently observed male predominance of patients in intensive care units (ICUs) has raised concerns about gender-based disparities in ICU access. Comparing rates of ICU admission requires choosing a normalizing factor (denominator), and the denominator usually used to compare such rates between subpopulations is the size of those subpopulations. However, the appropriate denominator is the number of people whose medical condition warranted ICU care. We devised an estimate of the number of critically ill people in the general population, and used it to compare rates of ICU admission by gender and income.MethodsThis population-based, retrospective analysis included all adults in the Canadian province of Manitoba, 2004-2015. We created an estimate for the number of critically ill people who warrant ICU care, and used it as the denominator to generate critical illness-normalized rates of ICU admission. These were compared to the usual population-normalized rates of ICU care.ResultsMen outnumbered women in ICUs for all age groups; population-normalized male:female rate ratios significantly exceed 0 for every age group, ranging from 1.15 to 2.10. Using critical-illness normalized rates, this male predominance largely disappeared; critically ill men and women aged 45-74 years were admitted in equivalent proportions (critical-illness normalized rate ratios 0.96-1.01). While population-normalized rates of ICU care were higher in lower income strata (p < 0.001), the gradient for critical illness-based rates was reversed (p < 0.001).ConclusionsAcross a 30-year adult age span, the male predominance of ICU patients was accounted for by higher estimated rates of critical illness among men. People in lower income strata had lower critical-illness normalized rates of ICU admission. Our methods highlight that correct inferences about access to healthcare require calculating rates using denominators appropriate for this purpose.

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