In-Hospital Mortality Prediction
Cross-source consensus on In-Hospital Mortality Prediction from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
Comparisons
Evidence quality
Other
Highlighted claims
- PBR's predictive value for in-hospital mortality is statistically comparable to that of NEWS as measured by decision curve analysis. — The use of the raw pulse/breathing rate ratio (PBR) as a predictor of mortality and criticality in the emergency department: a retrospective study
- Both pulse rate and breathing rate individually show U-shaped relationships with most adverse outcomes, but the combined PBR captures additional predictive information beyond either component alone. — The use of the raw pulse/breathing rate ratio (PBR) as a predictor of mortality and criticality in the emergency department: a retrospective study
- In febrile untreated patients, the empirically lowest-risk range for pulse rate is 72–102 beats/min, shifted upward from the standard healthy-population normal of 60–100 beats/min. — The use of the raw pulse/breathing rate ratio (PBR) as a predictor of mortality and criticality in the emergency department: a retrospective study
- Prior research on PBR has focused on physiological development and cancer rather than acute critical illness, leaving a gap this study addresses. — The use of the raw pulse/breathing rate ratio (PBR) as a predictor of mortality and criticality in the emergency department: a retrospective study