TY - JOUR
T1 - Time to clinical stability in patients hospitalized with community- acquired pneumonia
T2 - Implications for practice guidelines
AU - Halm, Ethan A.
AU - Fine, Michael J.
AU - Marrie, Thomas J.
AU - Coley, Christopher M.
AU - Kapoor, Wishwa N.
AU - Obrosky, D. Scott
AU - Singer, Daniel E.
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2007 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 1998/5/13
Y1 - 1998/5/13
N2 - Context. - Many groups have developed guidelines to shorten hospital length of stay in pneumonia in order to decrease costs, but the length of time until a patient hospitalized with pneumonia becomes clinically stable has not been established. Objective. - To describe the time to resolution of abnormalities in vital signs, ability to eat, and mental status in patients with community-acquired pneumonia and assess clinical outcomes after achieving stability. Design. - Prospective, multicenter, observational cohort study. Setting. - Three university and 1 community teaching hospital in Boston, Mass, Pittsburgh, Pa, and Halifax, Nova Scotia. Patients. - Six hundred eighty-six adults hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia. Main Outcome Measures. - Time to resolution of vital signs, ability to eat, mental status, hospital length of stay, and admission to an intensive care, coronary care, or telemetry unit. Results. - The median time to stability was 2 days for heart rate (≤100 beats/min) and systolic blood pressure (≤90 mm Hg), and 3 days for respiratory rate (≤24 breaths/min), oxygen saturation (≤90%), and temperature (≤37.2°C [99°F]). The median time to overall clinical stability was 3 days for the most lenient definition of stability and 7 days for the most conservative definition. Patients with more severe cases of pneumonia at presentation took longer to reach stability. Once stability was achieved, clinical deterioration requiring intensive care, coronary care, or telemetry monitoring occurred in 1% of cases or fewer. Between 65% to 86% of patients stayed in the hospital more than 1 day after reaching stability, and fewer than 29% to 46% were converted to oral antibiotics within 1 day of stability, depending on the definition of stability. Conclusions. - Our estimates of time to stability in pneumonia and explicit criteria for defining stability can provide an evidence-based estimate of optimal length of stay, and outline a clinically sensible approach to improving the efficiency of in-patient management.
AB - Context. - Many groups have developed guidelines to shorten hospital length of stay in pneumonia in order to decrease costs, but the length of time until a patient hospitalized with pneumonia becomes clinically stable has not been established. Objective. - To describe the time to resolution of abnormalities in vital signs, ability to eat, and mental status in patients with community-acquired pneumonia and assess clinical outcomes after achieving stability. Design. - Prospective, multicenter, observational cohort study. Setting. - Three university and 1 community teaching hospital in Boston, Mass, Pittsburgh, Pa, and Halifax, Nova Scotia. Patients. - Six hundred eighty-six adults hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia. Main Outcome Measures. - Time to resolution of vital signs, ability to eat, mental status, hospital length of stay, and admission to an intensive care, coronary care, or telemetry unit. Results. - The median time to stability was 2 days for heart rate (≤100 beats/min) and systolic blood pressure (≤90 mm Hg), and 3 days for respiratory rate (≤24 breaths/min), oxygen saturation (≤90%), and temperature (≤37.2°C [99°F]). The median time to overall clinical stability was 3 days for the most lenient definition of stability and 7 days for the most conservative definition. Patients with more severe cases of pneumonia at presentation took longer to reach stability. Once stability was achieved, clinical deterioration requiring intensive care, coronary care, or telemetry monitoring occurred in 1% of cases or fewer. Between 65% to 86% of patients stayed in the hospital more than 1 day after reaching stability, and fewer than 29% to 46% were converted to oral antibiotics within 1 day of stability, depending on the definition of stability. Conclusions. - Our estimates of time to stability in pneumonia and explicit criteria for defining stability can provide an evidence-based estimate of optimal length of stay, and outline a clinically sensible approach to improving the efficiency of in-patient management.
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U2 - 10.1001/jama.279.18.1452
DO - 10.1001/jama.279.18.1452
M3 - Article
C2 - 9600479
AN - SCOPUS:0032513753
SN - 0098-7484
VL - 279
SP - 1452
EP - 1457
JO - Journal of the American Medical Association
JF - Journal of the American Medical Association
IS - 18
ER -