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Pneumonia in adults - Quality standard QS110

Bhutani, Gita; Bostock, Jennifer; Bromley, Helen; Chowan, Hasan; de la Motte, Amanda; Dick, Phillip; Dunn, Phyllis; Hajioff, Steve; Manifold, Ian; Maxwell, Gavin; Middleton, Teresa; Milliard, Juliette; Oliver, Sally; Trender, Hazel; Van Woerden, Hugo; Wee, Bee; Whitehead, Karen; Whitmarsh, Alyson; Worsley, Jane; Zermamsky, Arnold; Ashton, Corrine; Francis, Caia; Lim, We Shin; Mansfield, Helen; Maufe, Peter; More, Michael; Poundsfound, John; Woodhead, Mark

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Authors

Gita Bhutani

Jennifer Bostock

Helen Bromley

Hasan Chowan

Amanda de la Motte

Phillip Dick

Phyllis Dunn

Steve Hajioff

Ian Manifold

Gavin Maxwell

Teresa Middleton

Juliette Milliard

Sally Oliver

Hazel Trender

Hugo Van Woerden

Bee Wee

Karen Whitehead

Alyson Whitmarsh

Jane Worsley

Arnold Zermamsky

Corrine Ashton

Caia Francis

We Shin Lim

Helen Mansfield

Peter Maufe

Michael More

John Poundsfound

Mark Woodhead



Abstract

Introduction
This quality standard covers adults (18 years and older) with a suspected or confirmed diagnosis of community acquired pneumonia. For more information see the pneumonia topic overview.

Why this quality standard is needed
Pneumonia is an infection of the lung tissue. When a person has pneumonia the air sacs in their lungs become filled with microorganisms, fluid and inflammatory cells and their lungs are not able to work properly. Diagnosis of pneumonia is based on symptoms and signs of an acute lower respiratory tract infection, and can be confirmed by a chest X-ray showing new shadowing that is not due to any other cause (such as pulmonary oedema or infarction). The NICE guideline on pneumonia classifies pneumonia depending on the source of the infection as community acquired or hospital-acquired, which need different management strategies.

Every year between 0.5% and 1% of adults in the UK will have community-acquired pneumonia. It is diagnosed in 5–12% of adults who present to GPs with symptoms of lower respiratory tract infection, and 22–42% of these are admitted to hospital, where the mortality rate is between 5% and 14%. Between 1.2% and 10% of adults admitted to hospital with community acquired pneumonia are managed in an intensive care unit, and for these patients the risk of dying is over 30%. More than half of pneumonia-related deaths occur in people older than 84 years.

At any time, 1.5% of hospital patients in England have a hospital-acquired respiratory infection, more than half of which are hospital-acquired pneumonia and are not associated with intubation. Hospital-acquired pneumonia is estimated to increase a hospital stay by about 8 days and has a reported mortality rate ranging from 30–70%. There are variations in clinical management and outcomes across the UK.

Report Type Project Report
Publication Date Jan 1, 2016
Deposit Date Mar 3, 2016
Publicly Available Date Mar 8, 2016
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Keywords pneumonia, adults, management
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/916888
Publisher URL https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/qs110#
Additional Information Corporate Creators : NICE Advisory Committee, Quality Standards Project Team
Contract Date Mar 3, 2016

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