Background: Throughout the world, the cost of critical care medicine is increasing more than the overall health care cost. Thus, a higher attention to improve the efficiency of the use of ICU resources is indispensable. The objective of this study was the development of a simple and reliable tool for the evaluation of the appropriateness of ICU utilization.
Design: A repeated cross-sectional data collection was performed twice a week, during a 61-day study period.
Setting: Twenty-three Italian general ICUs.
Patients: All patients present in the 23 ICUs on the 17 index days.
Interventions: On each index day, patients were checked for receiving ventilation/CPAP, pulmonary arterial pressure monitoring, intracranial pressure monitoring, vaso-active drug infusion and hemodialysis-ultrafiltration. Simultaneously, each ICU bed was assessed for its technical and personnel facilities in order to estimate the deliverable level of care.
Results: A total of 1250 patients were studied, for a total number of 7533 patient-days. The overall occupancy rate per ICU was 83.8% (-range: 54.4% to 96.1%). The high-level occupancy rate (rate of patients requiring high level of care and actually occupying high-facility beds) was 69.4% (range: 25.0% to 149.0%), while the corresponding low-level occupancy rate was 101.1% (range: 31.3% to 329.4%).
Conclusions: Our model clearly showed up a certain degree of inappropriateness in the use of ICU resources. Most of the ICUs (69.6%) used a very large proportion of their high-facility beds for patients who did not need high-level care. Being very simple, our method could represent a useful tool for continuous evaluation of the appropriateness of resource utilization in the ICU.