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Elderly patients hospitalized in the ICU in F rance: a population‐based study using secondary data from the national hospital discharge database
Author(s) -
Fassier Thomas,
Duclos Antoine,
AbbasChorfa Fatima,
CourayTarge Sandrine,
West T Eoin,
Argaud Laurent,
Colin Cyrille
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of evaluation in clinical practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.737
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1365-2753
pISSN - 1356-1294
DOI - 10.1111/jep.12497
Subject(s) - medicine , interquartile range , intensive care unit , context (archaeology) , intensive care , emergency medicine , population , intensive care medicine , pediatrics , paleontology , environmental health , biology
Rationale, aims and objectives In the global context of population ageing, understanding and monitoring intensive care use by the elderly is a strategic issue. National‐level data are needed to overcome sampling biases that often limit epidemiologic studies of the critically ill elderly. The objective of this study was to describe intensive care use for hospitalized elderly patients using secondary data from the French national hospital discharge database. Method Structured assessment of the national database coverage and accuracy; cross‐sectional analysis of hospitalizations including at least one admission in an intensive care unit ( ICU ) for patients aged ≥ 80 years from 1 J anuary to 31 D ecember 2009. Results In 2009, people aged ≥ 80 years accounted for 5.4% of the population but 15.3% of the 215 210 adult hospitalizations involving intensive care in F rance. In this elderly group, the mean age was 84.0 (± 3.56) years, and 51.6% were male. In‐hospital mortality was 33.9%. The median time spent in the ICU was 3 [interquartile range ( IQR ), 2–8] days, the median time spent in hospital was 14 ( IQR , 8–24) days and 9% of hospitalizations ended by the patient's death involved intensive care. A surgical procedure was included in 43% of hospitalizations. Medical and surgical diagnosis‐related group hospitalizations were characterized by significant differences in volume, mortality, ICU days and costs. Conclusions There was marked clinical heterogeneity in the population of elderly patients hospitalized in the ICU . These data provide baseline information and prompt further studies comparing intensive care utilization across age groups, between countries and over time.