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An evaluation of community assessment tools (CATs) in predicting use of clinical interventions and severe outcomes during the A(H1N1)pdm09 pandemic

An evaluation of community assessment tools (CATs) in predicting use of clinical interventions and severe outcomes during the A(H1N1)pdm09 pandemic
An evaluation of community assessment tools (CATs) in predicting use of clinical interventions and severe outcomes during the A(H1N1)pdm09 pandemic
During severe influenza pandemics healthcare demand can exceed clinical capacity to provide normal standards of care. Community Assessment Tools (CATs) could provide a framework for triage decisions for hospital referral and admission. CATs have been developed based on evidence that supports the recognition of severe influenza and pneumonia in the community (including resource limited settings) for adults, children and infants, and serious feverish illness in children. CATs use six objective criteria and one subjective criterion, any one or more of which should prompt urgent referral and admission to hospital. A retrospective evaluation of the ability of CATs to predict use of hospital-based interventions and patient outcomes in a pandemic was made using the first recorded routine clinical assessment on or shortly after admission from 1520 unselected patients (800 female, 480 children <16 years) admitted with PCR confirmed A(H1N1)pdm09 infection (the FLU-CIN cohort). Outcome measures included: any use of supplemental oxygen; mechanical ventilation; intravenous antibiotics; length of stay; intensive or high dependency care; death; and “severe outcome” (combined: use of intensive or high dependency care or death during admission). Unadjusted and multivariable analyses were conducted for children (age <16 years) and adults. Each CATs criterion independently identified both use of clinical interventions that would in normal circumstances only be provided in hospital and patient outcome measures. “Peripheral oxygen saturation ?92% breathing air, or being on oxygen” performed well in predicting use of resources and outcomes for both adults and children; supporting routine measurement of peripheral oxygen saturation when assessing severity of disease. In multivariable analyses the single subjective criterion in CATs “other cause for clinical concern” independently predicted death in children and in adults predicted length of stay, mechanical ventilation and “severe outcome”; supporting the role of clinical acumen as an important independent predictor of serious illness.
1932-6203
e75384
Cowling, Benjamin J.
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Semple, Malcolm G.
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Myles, Puja R.
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Nicholson, Karl G.
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Lim, Wei Shen
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Read, Robert C.
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Taylor, Bruce L.
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Brett, Stephen J.
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Openshaw, Peter J.M.
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Enstone, Joanne E.
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McMenamin, James
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Bannister, Barbara
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Nguyen-Van-Tam, Jonathan S.
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Cowling, Benjamin J.
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Semple, Malcolm G.
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Myles, Puja R.
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Nicholson, Karl G.
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Lim, Wei Shen
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Read, Robert C.
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Taylor, Bruce L.
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Brett, Stephen J.
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Openshaw, Peter J.M.
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Enstone, Joanne E.
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McMenamin, James
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Bannister, Barbara
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Nguyen-Van-Tam, Jonathan S.
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Cowling, Benjamin J., Semple, Malcolm G., Myles, Puja R., Nicholson, Karl G., Lim, Wei Shen, Read, Robert C., Taylor, Bruce L., Brett, Stephen J., Openshaw, Peter J.M., Enstone, Joanne E., McMenamin, James, Bannister, Barbara and Nguyen-Van-Tam, Jonathan S. (2013) An evaluation of community assessment tools (CATs) in predicting use of clinical interventions and severe outcomes during the A(H1N1)pdm09 pandemic. PLoS ONE, 8 (9), e75384. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0075384). (PMID:24069409)

Record type: Article

Abstract

During severe influenza pandemics healthcare demand can exceed clinical capacity to provide normal standards of care. Community Assessment Tools (CATs) could provide a framework for triage decisions for hospital referral and admission. CATs have been developed based on evidence that supports the recognition of severe influenza and pneumonia in the community (including resource limited settings) for adults, children and infants, and serious feverish illness in children. CATs use six objective criteria and one subjective criterion, any one or more of which should prompt urgent referral and admission to hospital. A retrospective evaluation of the ability of CATs to predict use of hospital-based interventions and patient outcomes in a pandemic was made using the first recorded routine clinical assessment on or shortly after admission from 1520 unselected patients (800 female, 480 children <16 years) admitted with PCR confirmed A(H1N1)pdm09 infection (the FLU-CIN cohort). Outcome measures included: any use of supplemental oxygen; mechanical ventilation; intravenous antibiotics; length of stay; intensive or high dependency care; death; and “severe outcome” (combined: use of intensive or high dependency care or death during admission). Unadjusted and multivariable analyses were conducted for children (age <16 years) and adults. Each CATs criterion independently identified both use of clinical interventions that would in normal circumstances only be provided in hospital and patient outcome measures. “Peripheral oxygen saturation ?92% breathing air, or being on oxygen” performed well in predicting use of resources and outcomes for both adults and children; supporting routine measurement of peripheral oxygen saturation when assessing severity of disease. In multivariable analyses the single subjective criterion in CATs “other cause for clinical concern” independently predicted death in children and in adults predicted length of stay, mechanical ventilation and “severe outcome”; supporting the role of clinical acumen as an important independent predictor of serious illness.

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Published date: 19 September 2013
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 360026
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/360026
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: f69abc31-ba7f-40e8-aff1-a52be7c66f36
ORCID for Robert C. Read: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4297-6728

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Date deposited: 21 Nov 2013 13:19
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:42

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Contributors

Author: Benjamin J. Cowling
Author: Malcolm G. Semple
Author: Puja R. Myles
Author: Karl G. Nicholson
Author: Wei Shen Lim
Author: Robert C. Read ORCID iD
Author: Bruce L. Taylor
Author: Stephen J. Brett
Author: Peter J.M. Openshaw
Author: Joanne E. Enstone
Author: James McMenamin
Author: Barbara Bannister
Author: Jonathan S. Nguyen-Van-Tam

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