Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT07182916

Factors Associated With Early Readmission in Critical Care

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
1,000 (estimated)
Sponsor
Société Française d'Anesthésie et de Réanimation · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The COVID-19 health crisis has highlighted pre-existing challenges in patient flow management within healthcare facilities, especially in critical care units. This has sparked debate regarding the sufficiency of critical care beds in France, while drawing attention to the lack of downstream structures. Inefficient patient flow, leading to bed occupancy bottlenecks, has been correlated with both critical care length of stay and morbidity. Unplanned early readmission to critical care further exacerbates these strains and prolongs hospital length of stay. Currently, no standardized criteria are available to guide safe discharge from critical care. A recent Delphi consensus study proposed a set of criteria, although largely subjective. The primary outcome of the present study is to identify factors associated with unplanned early readmission to critical care within 48 hours of discharge. Delayed discharge from critical care represents another major bottleneck contributing to system strain. The secondary outcome of this study is therefore to assess the proportion of critical care beds occupied by patients deemed ready for discharge by the medical team, as well as to analyze the reasons underlying such delayed transfers.

Detailed description

The COVID-19 health crisis has highlighted pre-existing challenges in patient flow management within healthcare facilities, especially in critical care units. This has sparked debate regarding the sufficiency of critical care beds in France, while drawing attention to the lack of downstream structures. Inefficient patient flow, leading to bed occupancy bottlenecks, has been correlated with both critical care length of stay and morbidity. Unplanned early readmission to critical care further exacerbates these strains and prolongs hospital length of stay. Currently, no standardized criteria are available to guide safe discharge from critical care. A recent Delphi consensus study proposed a set of criteria, although largely subjective. The primary outcome of the present study is to identify factors associated with unplanned early readmission to critical care within 48 hours of discharge. Delayed discharge from critical care represents another major bottleneck contributing to system strain. The secondary outcome of this study is therefore to assess the proportion of critical care beds occupied by patients deemed ready for discharge by the medical team, as well as to analyze the reasons underlying such delayed transfers.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERNo interventionOnly observation

Timeline

Start date
2026-01-12
Primary completion
2026-04-15
Completion
2026-06-15
First posted
2025-09-19
Last updated
2026-04-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07182916. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.