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National Resource Center for Health IT

Research and Projects: AHRQ THQIT and SRD Portfolio

Texas

Measuring the Value of Remote ICU Monitoring

Description:  Examines the effect of tele-ICU monitoring on mortality, complications, length of stay, cost-effectiveness, provider attitudes, and human factors issues in ICUs and 7 community hospitals.

Abstract:  DESCRIPTION (provided by the applicant): A powerful influence on the quality of care in intensive care units (ICUs) is the presence of critical care physicians (intensivists) in the unit. High-intensity intensivist staffing (required intensivist consultation or closed ICU where intensivists see all patients) is associated with a 29 percent reduction in hospital mortality and a 49 percent reduction in ICU mortality. However, only 10-15 percent of U.S. hospitals have high-intensity staffing by intensivists, primarily due to an existing and worsening shortage of intensivists. Telemedicine, a common form of health information technology, has been used to provide remote intensivist monitoring for ICUs via a tele-ICU. The only study of remote ICU monitoring with a tele-ICU found a reduction in mortality and length of stay comparable to on-site intensivist staffing. More research is needed because of limitations with this single study, the growing demand for intensivist coverage in ICUs, the shortage of intensivists, and the possible effectiveness of tele-ICUs. The specific aims of this study are: 1. To measure the effect of a tele-ICU on mortality, complications, and length of stay in ICUs in a tertiary care teaching hospital, and in seven community (including two "small") hospitals using a pre- and post-intervention study design. 2. To measure the cost-effectiveness of the tele-ICU. 3. To use human factors engineering techniques to determine how changes to the user interface of the tele-ICU may increase the value of the technology. 4. To measure changes in healthcare provider attitudes about teamwork and safety climate after implementation of the tele-ICU.

Year 1 Funding:  $492,000

Estimated Total Funding:  $1,442,426

Principal Investigator:  Eric Thomas

Applicant Institution:  University of Texas-Houston

City/Town:  Houston, Texas

State:  Texas

Grant Number:  R01 HS15234

Category:  Value Grants (THQIT)

Thesaurus Terms:  automated health care system, health care quality, intensive care, patient care planning, technology /technique development, telemedicine, community health service, computer human interaction, cost effectiveness, hospital length of stay, human mortality, patient care personnel attitude, patient safety /medical error, rural health, clinical research, health services research tag, human subject

Project Start Date:  Sep 30, 2004

Project End Date:  Sep 29, 2007

 
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