Incidence of unscheduled removal of invasive devices in patients with COVID-19 in intensive care.

Publication date: Mar 21, 2025

The rate of unscheduled removal of invasive devices (ID) is an indicator of quality programmes in the critically ill. Our research group performed prevalence analyses since 2010 and another during the pandemic. The aim was to analyse the rates of use and non-planed removal of endotracheal tubes, catheters (central venous and arterial) and enteral catheters in the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic comparing them with previous rates. Prevalence study in a polyvalente ICU. After 4 prospective observational analyses (2010, 2011, 2018, 2019) a retrospective analysis was performed (8 March-8 May 2020). diagnosis, stay and reason for removal of ID (endotracheal tubes (ET), central venous catheters, arterial catheters and enteral catheters) and rate of reintubation after self-removal of ET. Variables analysed and described as accidental removal rates per 1000 device-days and rates of ID use. 2026 patients were included (631 in 2010, 724 in 2011, 210 in 2018, 361 in 2019 and 100 in 2020). Significant differences, between all periods, in diagnoses (p

Concepts Keywords
Catheters Adverse event
Pandemic Airway Extubation
Retrospective Cateterismo venoso central
Central venous catheterization
COVID-19
Critical illness
Enfermedad crítica
Evento adverso
Extubación traqueal
Healthcare quality assessment
Prevalence
Prevalencia

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease IDO quality
disease MESH critically ill

Original Article

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