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An analysis of referrals to a level 3 intensive care unit in a resource-limited setting in South Africa


U.V. Jaganath
K. de Vasconcellos
D.L. Skinner
P.D. Gopalan

Abstract

Background: With a shortage of intensive care unit (ICU) beds and rising healthcare costs in resource-limited settings, clinicians need to
appropriately triage admissions into ICU to avoid wasteful expenditure and unnecessary bed utilisation.


Objective: To assess the nature, appropriateness and outcome of referrals to a tertiary centre ICU.


Methods: A retrospective review of ICU consults from September 2016 to February 2017 at King Edward VIII Hospital was performed. The study was approved by the University of KwaZulu-Natal Biomedical Research Ethics Committee (BE291/17). Data pertaining to patients’  demographics, referring doctor, diagnosis, comorbidities as well as biochemical and haemodynamic parameters were extracted. This  information was then crossreferenced to the outcome of the ICU consultation. Data were descriptively analysed.


Results: Five hundred  consultations were reviewed over a 6-month period; 52.2% of patients were male and the mean age was 44 years. Junior medical officers  referred 164 (32.8%) of the consultations. Although specialist supervision was available in 459 cases, it was only utilised in 339 (73.9%) of  these cases. Most referrals were from tertiary (46.8%) or regional (30.4%) hospitals; however, direct referrals from district hospitals and clinics accounted for 20.4% and 1.4% of consultations, respectively. The appropriate referral pathway was not followed in 81 (16.2%)  consultations. Forty-five percent of consults were accepted; however, 9.3% of these patients died before arrival in ICU. A total of 151  (30.2%) patients were refused ICU admission, with the majority (57%) of these owing to futility. Patients were unstable at the time of  consult in 53.2% of referrals and 34.4% of consults had missing data.


Conclusion: Critically ill patients are often referred by junior doctors  without senior consultation, and directly from low-level healthcare facilities. A large proportion of ICU referrals are deemed futile  and, of the patients accepted for admission, almost 1 in 10 dies prior to ICU admission. More emphasis needs to be placed on the  training of doctors to appropriately triage and manage critically ill patients and ensure appropriate ICU referral and optimising of patient  outcomes. 


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eISSN: 2078-676X
print ISSN: 1562-8264