Shift-Level Team Familiarity Is Associated with Improved Outcomes in Mechanically Ventilated Adults

Deena Kelly Costa, Olga Yakusheva, Lara Khadr, Hannah C. Ratliff, Kathryn A. Lee, Michael Sjoding, Jose Victor Jimenez, Deanna J. Marriott

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Rationale: Organizing ICU interprofessional teams - nurses, physicians, and respiratory therapists - is high priority because of workforce crises, but how often clinicians work together (i.e., interprofessional familiarity) remains unexplored. Objectives: Determine if mechanically ventilated patients cared for by teams with greater familiarity have lower mortality, shorter duration of mechanical ventilation, and greater spontaneous breathing trial (SBT) implementation. Methods: Using electronic health records from five ICUs (2018-2019), we identified the interprofessional team that cared for each mechanically ventilated patient each shift, calculated familiarity, and modeled familiarity exposures separately on ICU mortality, duration of mechanical ventilation, and SBT implementation using encounter-level generalized linear regression models with a log-link, unitlevel fixed effects adjusting for cofounders, including severity of illness. Measurements and Main Results: Familiarity was defined as how often clinicians worked together for all patients in an ICU (i.e., coreness) and for each patient (i.e., mean team value). Among 4,292 patients (4,485 encounters, 72,210 shifts), unadjusted mortality was 12.9%, average duration of mechanical ventilation was 2.32 days, and SBT implementation was 89%. An increase in coreness and mean team value, by the SD of each, was associated with lower probability of dying (coreness: adjusted marginal effect, 20.038; 95% confidence interval [20.07 to 20.004]; mean team value: adjusted marginal effect, 20.0034 [20.054 to 20.014]); greater probability of receiving SBT when eligible (coreness: 0.45 [0.007 to 0.083]; mean team value: 0.012 [20.017 to 0.042]), and shorter duration of mechanical ventilation (coreness: 20.23 [20.321 to 20.139]). Conclusions: Interprofessional familiarity was associated with improved outcomes; assignment models that prioritize familiarity might be a novel solution.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)311-317
Number of pages7
JournalAmerican journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
Volume210
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • evidence-based care
  • interprofessional teams
  • mechanical ventilation

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
  • Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

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