Critical Illness Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Multicenter Study of the Effect of Intensive Care Unit Attending Physician Work Schedules on Outcomes Relevant to Society
The care of critically ill patients in Intensive Care Units (ICUs) is an important part of
modern health care systems. However, ICU care suffers from similar problems as the rest of
the health care system. Powerful arguments support the concept that most of problems in
complex systems, such as ICUs, relates to flaws in institutional systems and processes that
hinder the ability of individuals to perform their jobs well. To fix these problems, the
defective systems and processes must be redesigned in ways that make it easy for people to
do their job well, and hard to make mistakes. Altering the structure of ICU care for the
purpose of improving ICU performance is an example of Organizational Systems Engineering,
alternatively called Total Quality Management.
Another serious problem in ICU care is that after 2007 there will be a increasing shortage
of physicians specializing in the care of the critically ill (Intensivists), with a 35%
shortfall by 2030. One contributor to this shortage is that Intensivists retire at a younger
age than do physicians in general, and often curtail their care of critically ill patients
even before they retire. It is likely that the emotional and physical demands of this career
choice leads Intensivists to "burn out" and leave the field prematurely. For these reasons
it is important to find ways to make working as an Intensivist more sustainable so that the
most experienced practitioners will continue in the field up to a normal retirement age.
The way in which groups of Intensivists organize themselves to provide care in an ICU is
highly variable. One potentially important way in which Intensivist staffing differs is in
the degree of continuity of care. The more days in a row that the same physician cares for a
patient the greater the continuity of care. While it is generally held that a higher
continuity of care results in better care and better outcomes for patients, in fact there
are no studies addressing this issue. On the other side of the coin however, it seems likely
that working many days in a row increases the physical and emotional burdens on the
Intensivist, increasing job distress and job burnout over time.
A common pattern of Intensivist staffing, in which continuity of care is reduced, is when
the Intensivist who is caring for ICU patients during the weekdays has the weekend off,
during which one of his/her partners provides "cross-coverage". While it is reasonable to
hypothesize that cross-coverage would lead to inefficient patient care, at the same time it
may reduce the burdens on the Intensivists.
This purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of weekend cross-coverage on both
ICU patients and on Intensivists. This will be a multicenter study performed in 4 member
institutions of the Midwest Critical Care Consortium: The University of Toledo, MetroHealth
Medical Center, Ohio State University, and Indiana University. Five adult medical ICUs from
the six institutions will participate in this study, with two ICUs from the Ohio State
University site.
To answer the research questions, each participating ICU will alternate between two common
models of Intensivist staffing. In both models an Intensivist is responsible for ICU care
for 14 days. In the Continuous model, a single Intensivist will be responsible for all 14
days. In the Discontinuous model, both weekends during the 14 days will be cross-covered by
a colleague. Continuity of care is higher in the Continuous model, which has 2 physician
transitions over a 4 week period, while the Discontinuous model has 8 transitions per 4
weeks. Each participating ICU will use one model for 12 weeks, then switch to the other
model for 12 weeks, and finally revert back to the first model for the final 12 weeks of
this 36 week study. To address problems of historical controls, seasonal differences, and to
increase comparability of groups, the participating ICUs have been randomly assigned to
begin the study either with the Continuous or Discontinuous model.
Comparisons will be made between the two scheduling models in: (1) patient outcomes,
specifically hospital mortality rate, ICU length of stay, and hospital length of stay, and
(2) Intensivist outcomes, specifically job distress, job burnout, and the balance between
work and home life.
Since there is currently nothing known about whether weekend cross-coverage influences
medical care, both models of care are common in ICUs. Thus the investigators expect that the
findings of this study will have general relevance. While the patients admitted to the
participating ICUs during this study would not be expected to benefit from this
investigation, the results derived are expected to enable policy makers to make
evidence-based decisions about this important aspect of ICU physician staffing and thus
improve the performance and/or cost-effectiveness of ICU care, benefiting future ICU
patients, and society.
n/a
Observational Model: Ecologic or Community, Time Perspective: Prospective
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