Long-term health care use among children surviving multiple organ dysfunction
Long-term health care use among children surviving multiple organ dysfunction
JAMA Network Open; Robert Ohman, MD, MPH; Jerry J. Zimmerman, MD, PhD; 1/25
Mortality outcomes of pediatric critical illness have improved over the last several decades, while concurrently the population of patients with technology dependency and complex chronic morbidities has continued to grow and the incidence of MOD [multiple organ dysfunction] has simultaneously increased. In the setting of declining critical illness mortality, pediatric outcomes research has broadened its scope to assess metrics beyond mortality, describing the trajectory of recovery from critical illness with measures of patient quality of life; physical, cognitive, and functional status; and family psychological and economic well-being. As the authors point out, assessment of the larger financial impact of this higher health care utilization on families themselves would be valuable future knowledge, as high health care utilization, appointments, and recurrent hospitalizations may detract from families’ ability to work, care for their other children, and attend to their own medical needs. Targeted support for families of survivors of MOD may be necessary to minimize these secondary impacts and to optimize outcomes for this vulnerable population of patients.