4.6 Article

Impact of home oxygen therapy on hospital stay for infants with acute bronchiolitis

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
Volume 171, Issue 12, Pages 1839-1844

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00431-012-1831-4

Keywords

Bronchiolitis; Oxygen therapy; Home health care

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Acute bronchiolitis has been associated with an increasing hospitalization rate over the past decades. The aim of this paper was to estimate the impact of home oxygen therapy (HOT) on hospital stay for infants with acute bronchiolitis. A retrospective cohort study was done including all children aged a parts per thousand currency sign12 months discharged from a pediatric tertiary-care center with a diagnosis of bronchiolitis, between November 2007 and March 2008. Oxygen was administered according to a standardized protocol. We assumed children with the following criteria could have been sent home with O-2, instead of being kept in hospital: age a parts per thousand yen2 months, distance between home and hospital < 50 km, in-hospital observation a parts per thousand yen24 h, O-2 requirement a parts per thousand currency sign1.0 L/min, stable clinical condition, no enteral tube feeding, and intravenous fluids < 50 mL/kg/day. Children with significant underlying disease were excluded. A total of 177 children were included. Median age was 2.0 months (range 0-11), and median length of stay was 3.0 days (range 0-18). Forty-eight percent of patients (85/177) received oxygen during their hospital stay. Criteria for discharge with HOT were met in 7.1 % of patients, a mean of 1.8 days (SD 1.8) prior to real discharge. The number of patient-days of hospitalization which would have been saved had HOT been available was 21, representing 3.0 % of total patient-days of hospitalization for bronchiolitis over the study period (21/701). Conclusions: In this study setting, few children were eligible for an early discharge with HOT. Home oxygen therapy would not significantly decrease the overall burden of hospitalization for bronchiolitis.

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