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Gender differences in the provision of intensive care: a Bayesian approach

Date Issued
2021-01-01
Author(s)
Todorov, Atanas
Kaufmann, Fabian
Arslani, Ketina  
Haider, Ahmed
Bengs, Susan
Goliasch, Georg
Zellweger, Núria  
Tontsch, Janna
Sutter, Raoul  
Buddeberg, Bigna  
Hollinger, Alexa  
Zemp, Elisabeth  
Kaufmann, Mark  
Siegemund, Martin  
Gebhard, Cathérine
Gebhard, Caroline E.  
Swiss Society of Intensive Care Medicine,
DOI
10.1007/s00134-021-06393-3
Abstract
PURPOSE: It is currently unclear whether management and outcomes of critically ill patients differ between men and women. We sought to assess the influence of age, sex and diagnoses on the probability of intensive care provision in critically ill cardio- and neurovascular patients in a large nationwide cohort in Switzerland. METHODS: Retrospective analysis of 450,948 adult patients with neuro- and cardiovascular disease admitted to all hospitals in Switzerland between 01/2012 and 12/2016 using Bayesian modeling. RESULTS: For all diagnoses and populations, median ages at admission were consistently higher for women than for men [75 (64;82) years in women vs. 68 (58;77) years in men, p 65 years (OR women:men 0.94 (0.89-0.99), p < 0.001). Women < 45 years had a similar ICU admission probability as men in the same age category [OR women:men 1.03 (0.94-1.13)], in spite of more severe illness. The odds to die were significantly higher in women than in men per unit increase in Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS) II (OR 1.008 [1.004-1.012]). CONCLUSION: In the care of the critically ill, our study suggests that women are less likely to receive ICU treatment regardless of disease severity. Underuse of ICU care was most prominent in younger women < 45 years. Although our study has several limitations that are imposed by the limited data available from the registries, our findings suggest that current ICU triage algorithms could benefit from careful reassessment. Further, and ideally prospective, studies are needed to confirm our findings.
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