Refusal of beds and triage of patients admitted to intensive care units in Brazil: a cross-sectional national survey

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Abstract

Objective: To obtain data on bed refusal in intensive care units in Brazil and to evaluate the use of triage systems by professionals. Methods: A cross-sectional survey. Using the Delphi methodology, a questionnaire was created contemplating the objectives of the study. Physicians and nurses enrolled in the research network of the Associação de Medicina Intensiva Brasileira (AMIBnet) were invited to participate. A web platform (SurveyMonkey®) was used to distribute the questionnaire. The variables in this study were measured in categories and expressed as proportions. The chi-square test or Fisher’s exact test was used to verify associations. The significance level was set at 5%. Results: In total, 231 professionals answered the questionnaire, representing all regions of the country. The national intensive care units had an occupancy rate of more than 90% always or frequently for 90.8% of the participants. Among the participants, 84.4% had already refused admitting patients to the intensive care unit due to the capacity of the unit. Half of the Brazilian institutions (49.7%) did not have triage protocols for admission to intensive beds. Conclusions: Bed refusal due to high occupancy rates is common in Brazilian intensive care units. Even so, half of the services in Brazil do not adopt protocols for triage of beds.

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de Lemos Lepre, R., Mezzaroba, A. L., Tibery Queiroz Cardoso, L., Matsuo, T., & Magalhães Carvalho Grion, C. (2023). Refusal of beds and triage of patients admitted to intensive care units in Brazil: a cross-sectional national survey. Revista Brasileira de Terapia Intensiva, 34(4), 484–491. https://doi.org/10.5935/0103-507X.20220264-en

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