Published April 12, 2016 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Prevalence and Predictive Value of Dyspnea Ratings in Hospitalized Patients: Pilot Studies

  • 1. Harvard University
  • 2. Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
  • 3. University of Chicago

Description

Background: Dyspnea (breathing discomfort) can be as powerfully aversive as pain, yet is not routinely assessed and documented in the clinical environment. Routine identification and documentation of dyspnea is the first step to improved symptom management and it may also identify patients at risk of negative clinical outcomes.

Objective: To estimate the prevalence of dyspnea and of dyspnea-associated risk among hospitalized patients.

Design: Two pilot prospective cohort studies.

Setting: Single academic medical center.

Patients: Consecutive patients admitted to four inpatient units: cardiology, hematology/oncology, medicine, and bariatric surgery.

Measurements: In Study 1, nurses documented current and recent patient-reported dyspnea at the time of the Initial Patient Assessment in 581 inpatients. In Study 2, nurses documented current dyspnea at least once every nursing shift in 367 patients. We describe the prevalence of burdensome dyspnea, and compare it to pain. We also compared dyspnea ratings with a composite of adverse outcomes: 1) receipt of care from the hospital's rapid response system, 2) transfer to the intensive care unit, or 3) death in hospital. We defined burdensome dyspnea as a rating of 4 or more on a 10-point scale.

Results: Prevalence of burdensome current dyspnea upon admission (Study 1) was 13% (77 of 581, 95% CI 11%-16%). Prevalence of burdensome dyspnea at some time during the hospitalization (Study 2) was 16% (57 of 367, 95% CI 12%-20%). Dyspnea was associated with higher odds of a negative outcome.

Conclusions: In two pilot studies, we identified a significant symptom burden of dyspnea in hospitalized patients. Patients reporting dyspnea may benefit from a more careful focus on symptom management and may represent a population at greater risk for negative outcomes.

Data availability

Our data include protected health information and are thereby restricted under PLOS One's guidelines, "Data cannot be made publicly available for ethical or legal reasons, e.g., public availability would compromise patient confidentiality or participant privacy". Requests for data can be sent to the first author at jpsteven@bidmc.harvard.edu.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0152601
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:7210

Funding

National Institute of Nursing Research
NR10006

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Medicine