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Erschienen in: Neurocritical Care 3/2017

25.07.2017 | Original Article

Factors Considered by Clinicians when Prognosticating Intracerebral Hemorrhage Outcomes

verfasst von: David Y. Hwang, Stacy Y. Chu, Cameron A. Dell, Mary J. Sparks, Tiffany D. Watson, Carl D. Langefeld, Mary E. Comeau, Jonathan Rosand, Thomas W.K. Battey, Sebastian Koch, Mario L. Perez, Michael L. James, Jessica McFarlin, Jennifer L. Osborne, Daniel Woo, Steven J. Kittner, Kevin N. Sheth

Erschienen in: Neurocritical Care | Ausgabe 3/2017

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Abstract

Background

The early subjective clinical judgment of clinicians outperforms formal prognostic scales for accurate determination of outcome after intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), with the judgment of physicians and nurses having equivalent accuracy. This study assessed specific decisional factors that physicians and nurses incorporate into early predictions of functional outcome.

Methods

This prospective observational study enrolled 121 ICH patients at five US centers. Within 24 h of each patient’s admission, one physician and one nurse on the clinical team were each surveyed to predict the patient’s modified Rankin Scale (mRS) at 3 months and to list up to 10 subjective factors used in prognostication. Factors were coded and compared between (1) physician and nurse and (2) accurate and inaccurate surveys, with accuracy defined as an exact prediction of mRS.

Results

Aside from factors that are components of the ICH or FUNC scores, surveys reported pre-existing comorbidities (40.0%), other clinical or radiographic factors not in clinical scales (43.0%), and non-clinical/radiographic factors (21.9%) as important. Compared to physicians, nurses more frequently listed neurologic examination components (Glasgow Coma Scale motor, 27.3 vs. 5.8%, p < 0.0001; GCS verbal, 12.4 vs. 0.0%, p < 0.0001) and non-clinical/radiographic factors (31.4 vs. 12.4%, p = 0.0005). Physicians more frequently listed neuroimaging factors (ICH location, 33.9 vs. 7.4%, p < 0.0001; intraventricular hemorrhage, 13.2 vs. 2.5%, p = 0.003). There was no difference in listed factors between accurate versus inaccurate surveys.

Conclusions

Clinicians frequently utilize factors outside of the components of clinical scales for prognostication, with physician and nurses focusing on different factors despite having similar accuracy.
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Metadaten
Titel
Factors Considered by Clinicians when Prognosticating Intracerebral Hemorrhage Outcomes
verfasst von
David Y. Hwang
Stacy Y. Chu
Cameron A. Dell
Mary J. Sparks
Tiffany D. Watson
Carl D. Langefeld
Mary E. Comeau
Jonathan Rosand
Thomas W.K. Battey
Sebastian Koch
Mario L. Perez
Michael L. James
Jessica McFarlin
Jennifer L. Osborne
Daniel Woo
Steven J. Kittner
Kevin N. Sheth
Publikationsdatum
25.07.2017
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Neurocritical Care / Ausgabe 3/2017
Print ISSN: 1541-6933
Elektronische ISSN: 1556-0961
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12028-017-0430-7

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