Construction and Validation of a Tool for Automatic Identification of Care Pathways At Risk of Sub-optimality in the Management of Severe Infections in Children (DIABACT IV)
- Conditions
- Severe Infection
- Registration Number
- NCT02167802
- Lead Sponsor
- Nantes University Hospital
- Brief Summary
Community bacterial infection remains to this day a common cause of morbidity and mortality in children, which preventability is a challenge for clinicians. In a previous work, the investigators found that 76% supported children admitted to the ICU for severe bacterial infection were appraised as suboptimal and significantly associated with an increased risk of death. In this context, the investigators seek to identify indicators of extractable data PMSI and SNIIR -AM associated with a higher risk of suboptimal early taking care of children with severe bacterial infection in order to combine them and use them as a score or decision tree that the investigators will validate data from a national prospective multicenter study including 512 children admitted to the ICU for severe infection. The investigators then propose a score associated with a risk of suboptimality care to evaluate the performance of the healthcare system .
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 524
Not provided
- Nosocomial Infections as defined by the Ministry of Health in its January 2007 issue on nosocomial infections namely: Nosocomial infections are infections acquired in a healthcare facility. Infection is considered nosocomial if it was absent at the time of admission of the patient in the health facility. When the infectious status of the patient at admission is unknown, the infection is generally considered nosocomial if it occurs after a period of at least 48 hours of hospitalization or a period longer than the incubation period of the infection. In case of surgical site infection, the period commonly allowed is 30 days, or if it has been set in place a prosthesis or implant, a year after the intervention.
- Children with whooping cough, bronchiolitis or viral infections
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method the optimality of care questionnaire 1 month optimality of care will be assessed by 2 independent experts, blinded to outcome and final diagnosis. Medical charts will be summarized and given to experts without outcome or diagnosis. They would be asked to evaluate optimality of care as follow: optimal, certainly sub-optimal, possibly suboptimal and not evaluable
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method outcome at the hospital discharge defined as death, survival without sequelae and survival with sequelae 1 month
Trial Locations
- Locations (12)
Angers University Hospital
🇫🇷Angers, France
Olivier Brissaud
🇫🇷Bordeaux, France
Jacques Sizun
🇫🇷Brest, France
Thierry Debillon
🇫🇷GRenoble, France
Stéphane Leteurtre
🇫🇷Lille, France
Etienne Javouhey
🇫🇷Lyon, France
Gilles Cambonie
🇫🇷Montpellier, France
Elise Launay
🇫🇷Nantes, France
Stéphane Dauger
🇫🇷Paris, France
Sylvain Renolleau
🇫🇷Paris, France
AP-HP
🇫🇷Paris, France
Hugues Patural
🇫🇷Saint-Etienne, France