NIV was successful in the vast majority of patients, particularly in those without risk factors and halved the LOS in intensive care. Failure of NIV was associated with increased duration of invasive ventilation and PICU LOS. A prospective study comparing different techniques of NIV will be helpful in defining the risks of failure of NIV.
Bronchiolitis represents the most common cause of non-elective admission to paediatric intensive care units (ICUs).We assessed changes in admission rate, respiratory support, and outcomes of infants <24 months with bronchiolitis admitted to ICU between 2002 and 2014 in Australia and New Zealand.During the study period, bronchiolitis was responsible for 9628 (27.6%) of 34 829 non-elective ICU admissions. The estimated population-based ICU admission rate due to bronchiolitis increased by 11.76 per 100 000 each year (95% CI 8.11-15.41). The proportion of bronchiolitis patients requiring intubation decreased from 36.8% in 2002, to 10.8% in 2014 (adjusted OR 0.35, 95% CI 0.27-0.46), whilst a dramatic increase in high-flow nasal cannula therapy use to 72.6% was observed (p<0.001). We observed considerable variability in practice between units, with six-fold differences in risk-adjusted intubation rates that were not explained by ICU type, size, or major patient factors. Annual direct hospitalisation costs due to severe bronchiolitis increased to over USD30 million in 2014.We observed an increasing healthcare burden due to severe bronchiolitis, with a major change in practice in the management from invasive to non-invasive support that suggests thresholds to admittance of bronchiolitis patients to ICU have changed. Future studies should assess strategies for management of bronchiolitis outside ICUs.
Two thirds of children with chronic critical illness survive for at-least 5 years, but there was no improvement between 2000 and 2011. Cardiac disease constitutes an increasing proportion of pediatric chronic critical illness. Bone marrow transplant recipients and single-ventricle physiology have the poorest outcomes.
Objectives: To describe the incidence and mortality of invasive infections in Indigenous children admitted to paediatric and general intensive care units (ICUs) in Australia.
Design: Retrospective multi‐centre cohort study of Australian and New Zealand Paediatric Intensive Care Registry data.
Participants: All children under 16 years of age admitted to an ICU in Australia, 1 January 2002 – 31 December 2013. Indigenous children were defined as those identified as Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander in a mandatory admissions dataset.
Main outcomes: Population‐based ICU mortality and admission rates.
Results: Invasive infections accounted for 23.0% of non‐elective ICU admissions of Indigenous children (726 of 3150), resulting in an admission rate of 47.6 per 100 000 children per year. Staphylococcus aureus was the leading pathogen identified in children with sepsis/septic shock (incidence, 4.42 per 100 000 Indigenous children per year; 0.57 per 100 000 non‐Indigenous children per year; incidence rate ratio 7.7; 95% CI, 5.8–10.1; P < 0.001). While crude and risk‐adjusted ICU mortality related to invasive infections was not significantly different for Indigenous and non‐Indigenous children (odds ratio, 0.75; 95% CI, 0.53–1.07; P = 0.12), the estimated population‐based age‐standardised mortality rate for invasive infections was significantly higher for Indigenous children (2.67 per 100 000 per year v 1.04 per 100 000 per year; crude incidence rate ratio, 2.65; 95% CI, 1.88–3.64; P < 0.001).
Conclusions: The ICU admission rate for severe infections was several times higher for Indigenous than for non‐Indigenous children, particularly for S. aureus infections. While ICU case fatality rates were similar, the population‐based mortality was more than twice as high for Indigenous children. Our study highlights an important area of inequality in health care for Indigenous children in a high income country that needs urgent attention.
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