Institutional Care for Long-Term Mechanical Ventilation in Canada: A National Survey

Author:

Rose Louise12345,McKim Douglas67,Katz Sherri789,Leasa David1011,Nonoyama Mika12,Pedersen Cheryl13,Avendano Monica514,Goldstein Roger513

Affiliation:

1. Lawrence S Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto, Canada

2. Provincial Centre of Weaning Excellence/Prolonged Ventilation Weaning Centre, Toronto East General Hospital, Canada

3. Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Canada

4. Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St Michael’s Hospital, Canada

5. West Park Healthcare Centre, Toronto, Canada

6. The Ottawa Hospital Respiratory Rehabilitation and The Ottawa Hospital Sleep Centre, Canada

7. University of Ottawa, Canada

8. Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, Canada

9. Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Canada

10. London Health Sciences Centre, Canada

11. University of Western Ontario, London, Canada

12. University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Oshawa, Canada

13. Centre for Research in Inner City Health, Li Ka Shing Institute, St Michael’s Hospital, Canada

14. University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: No national Canadian data define resource requirements and care delivery for ventilator-assisted individuals (VAIs) requiring long-term institutional care. Such data will assist in planning health care services to this population.OBJECTIVE: To describe institutional and patient characteristics, prevalence, equipment used, care elements and admission barriers for VAIs requiring long-term institutional care.METHODS: Centres were identified from a national inventory and snowball referrals. The survey weblink was provided from December 2012 to April 2013. Weekly reminders were sent for six weeks.RESULTS: The response rate was 84% (54 of 64), with 44 adult and 10 pediatric centres providing data for 428 VAIs (301 invasive ventilation; 127 noninvasive ventilation [NIV]), equivalent to 1.3 VAIs per 100,000 population. An additional 106 VAIs were on wait lists in 18 centres. More VAIs with progressive neuromuscular disease received invasive ventilation than NIV (P<0.001); more VAIs with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (P<0.001), obesity hypoventilation syndrome (P<0.001) and central hypoventilation syndrome (P=0.02) required NIV. All centres used positive pressure ventilators, 21% diaphragmatic pacing, 15% negative pressure and 13% phrenic nerve stimulation. Most centres used lung volume recruitment (55%), manually (71%) and mechanically assisted cough (55%). Lack of beds and provincial funding were common admission barriers.CONCLUSIONS: Variable models and care practices exist for institutionalized care of Canadian VAIs. Patient prevalence was 1.3 per 100,000 Canadians.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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