NT Health Research and Publications Online

Title
The impact of alcohol-related admissions on resource use in critically ill patients from 2009 to 2015: an observational study.
Publication Date
2018-01-01
Author(s)
Secombe, Paul
Stewart, Penny
Affiliation
Lecturer, School of Medicine, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia.
Subject
drugs and alcohol, Aboriginal Health, intensive care, mechanical ventilation
MESH subject
Adult
Aged
Alcohol-Related Disorders
Australia
Critical Care
Critical Illness
Female
Hospitalization
Humans
Intensive Care Units
Length of Stay
Male
Middle Aged
Patient Readmission
Respiration, Artificial
Retrospective Studies
Type of document
Journal Article
Entity Type
Publication
Abstract
Excessive alcohol use is associated with increased health care utilisation and increased mortality. This observational study sought to identify the proportion of patients admitted with a critical illness in which alcohol misuse contributed, and to examine the resource use for this group. We performed an observational retrospective database review of all admissions to the Alice Springs Hospital intensive care unit (ICU) between 1 January 2009 and 31 December 2015. The Alice Springs Hospital ICU is a ten-bed unit located in Central Australia, with approximately 600 admissions annually. The per capita consumption of alcohol in Central Australia is approximately 1.5 times the national average. The primary aim was to determine the proportion of admissions to intensive care in which alcohol misuse was identified as a contributing cause. Secondary aims examined resource utilisation including ICU and hospital length of stay, need for and duration of mechanical ventilation, and ICU re-admission. There were 3,768 admissions involving 2,670 individual patients. Of these admissions 947 (25%) were associated with alcohol misuse. Admissions associated with alcohol were significantly more likely to require mechanical ventilation (30% versus 20%, <0.01), and had a significantly longer ICU length of stay (2.1 versus 1.9 days, <0.05). The proportion of admissions in which alcohol misuse was implicated is amongst the highest in the published literature. The results of this study should drive further policy change directed at harm minimisation, and warrant more detailed epidemiological work at both a local and national level.
Link
Citation
Anaesth Intensive Care . 2018 Jan;46(1):58-66. doi: 10.1177/0310057X1804600109.
ISSN
0310-057X
0310-057X
Pubmed ID
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29361257/?otool=iaurydwlib

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