Scoring systems Flashcards
1
Q
What type of scoring systems are available?
A
- Disease specific scores (Child-Pugh, Wells, CURB 65, CHADS VASc, GRACE, Glasgow-Imrie)
- Physiological and illness severity scores (APACHE II, SOFA, ICNARC, MODS, TISS)
2
Q
What are the features of an ideal scoring system?
A
- Valid
- Simple
- Discriminatory (plot sensitivity/specificity curve to get AUROC - should be at least 0.7
- Calibrated
- Transferrable
- Generateable from readily available data
3
Q
What are scoring systems used for?
A
- To assess performance of ICU care and outcomes
- To assess patient’s risk of mortality
- To compare populations
- To facilitate audit
- To tailor treatment
4
Q
How can we compare different ICUs?
A
- Outcome-based:
- SMR
- ICNARC case mix programme
- CRBSI rate
- VTE rate
- MRSA rate
- unit based bacteraemia - Process-based:
- Audit participation
- delirium screening
- FAST HUG
- early EN
- hand hygiene compliance
- VTE assessments. - Structure-based: GPICS standards (consultant cover, nurse:patient ratio, % days at full occupancy, MDT ward rounds, ICU follow-up)
5
Q
What is the standardised mortality rate?
A
SMR = observed mortality/predicted mortality
Problems with it include:
- doesn’t take into account pre-hospital or pre-ICU care discrepancies
- doesn’t take into account case-mix
- doesn’t take into account local baseline health and deprivation
- there may be varying application of scoring systems
6
Q
What is the CURB 65 score?
A
Confusion - new Urea >7.0 RR >30 Blood pressure <90 Age >65
Each scores 1
Increased score associated with increased mortality (4 = 40%)
Score >3 is severe and likely needing ICU admission.