Expedited admission of patients decreases duration of mechanical ventilation and shortens ICU stay.
Background: To determine if expedited admission (<2 hours) of critically ill patients requiring intubation and mechanical ventilation from the emergency department (ED) to the intensive care unit (ICU) decreases ICU and hospital length of stay.
Methods: Patients with respiratory failure that required intubation and mechanical ventilation who were admitted to the hospital between June 2004 and May 2006 were retrospectively identified from the Project IMPACT database. Patients were divided into 2 groups based on ED length of stay: expedited (<2 hours) or nonexpedited (>2 hours).
Results: The expedited (n = 12) and nonexpedited (n = 66) groups were comparable in demographics, medical conditions, and disease severity. Mean duration of mechanical ventilation was significantly shorter in the expedited group (28.4 hours vs 67.9 hours; P = .0431), as was mean ICU length of stay (2.4 days vs 4.9 days; P = .0209). Length of hospital stay tended to be shorter for the patients in the expedited group (6.8 days vs 8.9 days; P = .0609).
Conclusions: Expedited admission (<2 hours) of critically ill patients requiring intubation and mechanical ventilation from the ED to the ICU was associated with shorter durations of mechanical ventilation and ICU length of stay, suggesting that prompt ICU admission results in improved use of resources.