Abstract

BackgroundThe matching of critical care service supply with demand is fundamental for the efficient delivery of advanced life support to patients in urgent need. Mismatch in this supply/demand relationship contributes to “intensive care unit (ICU) capacity strain,” defined as a time-varying disruption in the ability of an ICU to provide well-timed and high-quality intensive care support to any and all patients who are or may become critically ill. ICU capacity strain leads to suboptimal quality of care and may directly contribute to heightened risk of adverse events, premature discharges, unplanned readmissions, and avoidable death. Unrelenting strain on ICU capacity contributes to inefficient health resource utilization and may negatively impact the satisfaction of patients, their families, and frontline providers. It is unknown how to optimally quantify the instantaneous and temporal “stress” an ICU experiences due to capacity strain.MethodsWe will perform a systematic review to identify, appraise, and evaluate quality and performance measures of strain on ICU capacity and their association with relevant patient-centered, ICU-level, and health system-level outcomes. Electronic databases (i.e., MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Web of Science, and the Agency of Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)—National Quality Measures Clearinghouse (NQMC)) will be searched for original studies of measures of ICU capacity strain. Selected gray literature sources will be searched. Search themes will focus on intensive care, quality, operations management, and capacity. Analysis will be primarily narrative. Each identified measure will be defined, characterized, and evaluated using the criteria proposed by the US Strategic Framework Board for a National Quality Measurement and Reporting System (i.e., importance, scientific acceptability, usability, feasibility).DiscussionOur systematic review will comprehensively identify, define, and evaluate quality and performance measures of ICU capacity strain. This is a necessary step towards understanding the impact of capacity strain on quality and performance in intensive care and to develop innovative interventions aimed to improve efficiency, avoid waste, and better anticipate impending capacity shortfalls.Systematic review registrationPROSPERO, CRD42015017931Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13643-015-0145-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The matching of critical care service supply with demand is fundamental for the efficient delivery of advanced life support to patients in urgent need

  • The matching of critical care service supply with demand is a fundamental requisite for the timely delivery of advanced life support technologies to patients in urgent need

  • Regardless of the reasons, mismatches between demand and supply for critical care services are increasingly encountered [13]. This mismatch on any given day in any given intensive care unit (ICU) will create a strain on that ICU’s capacity to accommodate the sickest patient

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Summary

Introduction

The matching of critical care service supply with demand is fundamental for the efficient delivery of advanced life support to patients in urgent need Mismatch in this supply/demand relationship contributes to “intensive care unit (ICU) capacity strain,” defined as a time-varying disruption in the ability of an ICU to provide well-timed and high-quality intensive care support to any and all patients who are or may become critically ill. The matching of critical care service supply with demand is a fundamental requisite for the timely delivery of advanced life support technologies to patients in urgent need. Mismatch in this supply/demand relationship creates intensive care unit (ICU) capacity strain. In preparation for this proposal, we found no robust or validated measures that enable quantification of the immediate or temporal “stress” an ICU experiences due to capacity strain

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