International journal of clinical monitoring and computing
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Int J Clin Monit Comput · Jan 1997
Comparative StudyThe effect of surgical ICU triage patterns on differing severity adjusted outcomes in France and the United States.
Surgical patients treated in French intensive care units (ICU's) appear to have higher mortality rates than patients in the United States. We hypothesized that this may be due to the French practice of not transferring dying patients from the ICU. We wished to determine if the different mortality rates could be explained by transfer practices for dying patients or other factors such as severity of illness. ⋯ The differences in severity adjusted ICU mortality between French ICU's and our SICU are explained by different triage practices for terminally ill patients following elective ICU admission. These triage differences do not fully explain the mortality differences seen among patients emergently admitted to the ICU. Other factors such as the presence of trauma, ICU staffing practices, patient mix or other unidentified factors may be responsible for the severity adjusted differences in mortality among emergency surgical ICU patients.