Title :
Physiological trajectory of patients pre and post ICU discharge1
Author :
Johnson, Alistair E. W. ; Burgess, Jonathan ; Pimentel, Marco A. F. ; Clifton, D.A. ; Young, J. Duncan ; Watkinson, Peter J. ; Tarassenko, Lionel
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Eng. Sci., Univ. of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Abstract :
The intensive care unit (ICU) admits the most severely ill patients, and the goal of the unit can be interpreted as stabilizing patient physiology. Once these patients are discharged from the ICU to a step-down ward, they continue to have their vital signs monitored by nursing staff. Early detection of physiological deterioration has been highlighted as a key step to reduce ICU readmission and improve patient outcomes. Vital signs were collected for a dataset of 98 patients admitted to an ICU and who survived to hospital discharge after their stay on a step-down ward. A model of physiological normality was developed using data from the day of hospital discharge, and patients were retrospectively evaluated throughout their stay using this model. We show that the physiology of patients being cared for in the ICU improves very rapidly in the three days prior to discharge, and furthermore, that this recovery continues during their stay on the ward, albeit at a slower rate.
Keywords :
health care; patient diagnosis; patient monitoring; hospital discharge; intensive care unit; patient post ICU discharge; patient pre ICU discharge; physiological deterioration detection; time 3 day; vital sign monitoring; Biomedical monitoring; Data models; Discharges (electric); Hospitals; Monitoring; Temperature measurement; Trajectory;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2014 36th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2014.6944293