Unmet Nonmedication Needs After Hospital Discharge and Adverse Outcomes Among Acute Respiratory Failure Survivors in Brazil: A Prospective Feasibility Study.

Publication date: Jul 01, 2025

In-hospital survivorship for acute respiratory failure has improved, but unmet nonmedication healthcare needs may contribute to adverse events post-discharge. To evaluate the feasibility of characterizing early unmet nonmedication discharge needs, classified as durable medical equipment (DME), home health services (HHS), and follow-up medical appointments (FUA) for acute respiratory failure survivors in Brazil. Secondary objectives include describing the profile of needs, unmet needs, and adverse outcomes post-discharge. Prospective feasibility cohort study, with enrollment between October 2020 and March 2021. One tertiary teaching hospital from Southern Brazil with 76 ICU beds. Adult survivors from acute respiratory failure who were discharged home. Our primary outcome was the feasibility of measuring unmet nonmedication needs between 7 and 28 days post-discharge, considering greater than 80% of data completeness as feasible. Secondary outcomes included the characterization of needs and needs unmet per type at 1 month and the crude risk of all-cause death, hospital readmission, and urgent visits to the emergency department at 3 months post-discharge. Of 337 patients screened, 72 were enrolled, and data on unmet nonmedication needs were collected from 66 patients, resulting in a primary feasibility outcome of 91. 7%. The median age was 59 years, 38. 9% were female, most were self-declared White, and were employed before admission. During the index admission, 87. 3% were diagnosed with COVID-19, and 79. 2% received invasive mechanical ventilation. The frequency of nonmedication discharge needs was 48 (72. 7%) for DME, 54 (81. 8%) for HHS, and 60 (90. 9%) for FUA. At 1 month, 36 (58. 1%) had at least one need unmet; at 3 months, 12 (19. 0%) had at least one adverse outcome. Detailed measurement of nonmedication needs post-discharge for acute respiratory failure survivors in Brazil is feasible. Unmet nonmedication needs are a common problem to be addressed in this population.

Concepts Keywords
Brazil acute respiratory failure
Covid Adult
Healthcare Aged
Survivorship Brazil
critical care
discharge planning
Feasibility Studies
Female
Home Care Services
Humans
long-term outcomes
Male
Middle Aged
Patient Discharge
post-intensive care syndrome
Prospective Studies
Respiratory Insufficiency
Survivors

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Respiratory Failure
disease MESH death
disease MESH emergency
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH post-intensive care syndrome

Original Article

(Visited 8 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *