Affiliation:
1. aUniversity of Utah School of Medicine, Primary Children’s Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah
2. bUniversity of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio
3. cUniversity of Colorado School of Medicine, Children’s Hospital of Colorado, Aurora, Colorado
Abstract
OBJECTIVES
To describe the current state of non-ICU high flow nasal cannula (HFNC) protocols at children’s hospitals and explore associations between HFNC protocol type and utilization outcomes.
METHODS
We performed a cross-sectional study of the Pediatric Health Information Systems (PHIS) database. First, we designed a survey with the purpose of classifying HFNC protocols used at hospitals currently contributing data to PHIS. Next, we categorized hospitals based on their current HFNC protocol (ICU only, age-based non-ICU, or weight-based non-ICU). Finally, using the PHIS database, we compared hospital characteristics and patient-level bronchiolitis outcomes by HFNC protocol group.
RESULTS
We received survey responses from 36 of 44 (82%) hospitals contributing data to PHIS in 2021. During the time period studied, there was a steady increase in adoption of non-ICU HFNC protocols, with 71% of responding children’s hospitals reporting non-ICU HFNC protocols in 2021 compared with 11% before 2010. No differences in hospital characteristics were observed between ICU-only hospitals, age-based hospitals, or weight-based hospitals. Age-based hospitals had the highest proportion of bronchiolitis patients treated in the ICU (36.1%), whereas weight-based hospitals had the lowest proportion of patients treated in the ICU (21.0%, P < .001). Length of stay was longer at age-based hospitals (2.9 days) as compared with weight-based and ICU-only hospitals (1.9 days, P < .001).
CONCLUSIONS
Most children’s hospitals have adopted non-ICU HFNC protocols for patients with bronchiolitis, the majority of which are now utilizing weight-based maximum flow rates. Weight-based HFNC protocols were associated with decreased ICU utilization compared with age-based HFNC protocols.
Publisher
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
Subject
Pediatrics,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Cited by
5 articles.
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