Severe sepsis cohorts derived from claims-based strategies appear to be biased toward a more severely ill patient population.
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Epidemiology and recent trends of severe sepsis in Spain: a nationwide population-based analysis (2006-2011)Developing a New Definition and Assessing New Clinical Criteria for Septic Shock: For the Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock (Sepsis-3)A Severe Sepsis Mortality Prediction Model and Score for Use With Administrative DataComparison of trends in sepsis incidence and coding using administrative claims versus objective clinical data.Sepsis in Canadian children: a national analysis using administrative data.Validity of administrative data in recording sepsis: a systematic review.Objective Sepsis Surveillance Using Electronic Clinical Data.Validation and optimisation of an ICD-10-coded case definition for sepsis using administrative health data.Comparison of Procedure-Based and Diagnosis-Based Identifications of Severe Sepsis and Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation in Administrative Data.Detecting the Hidden Properties of Immunological Data and Predicting the Mortality Risks of Infectious Syndromes.Sepsis surveillance from administrative data in the absence of a perfect verification.Improving documentation and coding for acute organ dysfunction biases estimates of changing sepsis severity and burden: a retrospective study.Do-not-resuscitate status and observational comparative effectiveness research in patients with septic shock*.Two decades of mortality trends among patients with severe sepsis: a comparative meta-analysis*.Discharge diagnoses versus medical record review in the identification of community-acquired sepsis.Trends in sepsis and infection sources in the United States. A population-based study.Hospital-based acute care use in survivors of septic shockEvolving trends in the epidemiology, resource utilization, and outcomes of pregnancy-associated severe sepsis: a population-based cohort study.Development, implementation, and impact of an automated early warning and response system for sepsis.Low Completeness of Bacteraemia Registration in the Danish National Patient RegistryCross-sectional comparison of critically ill pediatric patients across hospitals with various levels of pediatric care.Temporal trends in the systemic inflammatory response syndrome, sepsis, and medical coding of sepsis.Lactate Testing in Suspected Sepsis: Trends and Predictors of Failure to Measure Levels.Volume-Mortality Relationships during Hospitalization with Severe Sepsis Exist Only at Low Case Volumes.Post-Acute Care Use and Hospital Readmission after SepsisImpact of Policies on the Rise in Sepsis Incidence, 2000-2010Hospital Incidence and Mortality Rates of SepsisDiagnosing sepsis is subjective and highly variable: a survey of intensivists using case vignettes.The Changing Epidemiology and Definitions of Sepsis.The epidemiology of acute respiratory distress syndrome in patients presenting to the emergency department with severe sepsis.Use of explicit ICD9-CM codes to identify adult severe sepsis: impacts on epidemiological estimatesTime to initial antibiotic administration, and short-term mortality among patients admitted with community-acquired severe infections with and without the presence of systemic inflammatory response syndrome: a follow-up study.Epidemiology and Microbiology of Sepsis Syndromes in a University-Affiliated Urban Teaching Hospital and Level-1 Trauma and Burn Center.Application of the Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis (Sepsis-3) Classification: a retrospective population-based cohort study.Validation of Test Performance and Clinical Time Zero for an Electronic Health Record Embedded Severe Sepsis Alert.Increased Time to Initial Antimicrobial Administration Is Associated With Progression to Septic Shock in Severe Sepsis Patients.Comorbidities and Complications of Spinal Fusion for Scoliosis.Incidence and Trends of Sepsis in US Hospitals Using Clinical vs Claims Data, 2009-2014.qSOFA Has Poor Sensitivity for Prehospital Identification of Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock.Investigating the Impact of Different Suspicion of Infection Criteria on the Accuracy of Quick Sepsis-Related Organ Failure Assessment, Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome, and Early Warning Scores.
P2860
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P2860
Severe sepsis cohorts derived from claims-based strategies appear to be biased toward a more severely ill patient population.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
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scientific article published on April 2013
@en
vedecký článok
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vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
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vědecký článek
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name
Severe sepsis cohorts derived ...... verely ill patient population.
@en
Severe sepsis cohorts derived ...... verely ill patient population.
@nl
type
label
Severe sepsis cohorts derived ...... verely ill patient population.
@en
Severe sepsis cohorts derived ...... verely ill patient population.
@nl
prefLabel
Severe sepsis cohorts derived ...... verely ill patient population.
@en
Severe sepsis cohorts derived ...... verely ill patient population.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P921
P1476
Severe sepsis cohorts derived ...... verely ill patient population.
@en
P2093
Barry D Fuchs
Craig Kean
David F Gaieski
Mark E Mikkelsen
Sherine Koshy
Stacey-Ann Whittaker
P2860
P304
P356
10.1097/CCM.0B013E31827466F1
P407
P577
2013-04-01T00:00:00Z