Characteristics and Outcomes of Patients Discharged Directly Home From the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit

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Abstract

Introduction: Patients admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) typically transfer to an acute care floor prior to discharge (ACD). Various circumstances, including rapid clinical improvement, technology dependence, or capacity constraints, may lead to discharge directly to home from a PICU (DDH). This practice has been studied in adult intensive care units, but research is lacking for PICU patients. Methods: We aimed to describe characteristics and outcomes of patients requiring PICU admission who experienced DDH versus ACD. We conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients ≤18 years old admitted to our academic, tertiary care PICU between 1/1/15 and 12/31/20. Patients who died or were transferred to another facility were excluded. Baseline characteristics (including home ventilator dependence) and markers of illness severity, specifically the need for vasoactive infusion or new mechanical ventilation, were compared between groups. Admission diagnoses were categorized using the Pediatric Clinical Classification System (PECCS). Our primary outcome was hospital readmission within 30 days. Results: Of 4042 PICU admissions during the study period, 768 (19%) were DDH. Baseline demographic characteristics were similar, although DDH patients were more likely to have a tracheostomy (30% vs 5%, P

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Pizzuto, M. F., Sutton, A. G., Schroeder, K. S., Bravo, M. A., Li, L., & Kihlstrom, M. J. (2023). Characteristics and Outcomes of Patients Discharged Directly Home From the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, 38(8), 737–742. https://doi.org/10.1177/08850666231162530

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