Background: We designed a prospective study in the Puy-de-Dĵme region of France to identify factors associated with a hospitalization decision by general practitioners (GPs) for patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP).
Patients and methods: 95 voluntary GPs were recruited to report over the period (February 1993 to March 1994) patients diagnosed with CAP defined as acute onset of fever associated with focal pulmonary crackles and/or radiological changes consistent with a pulmonary infection in patients over 3 years of age, living in the community.
Results: 37 of the 175 CAP patients (21.4%) were hospitalized. Univariate analysis showed that the hospitalization decision was related to age > 65 years, retirement, history of cardiovascular disease, other extrapulmonary chronic disease, chest auscultation findings, tachypnea at rest and altered mental status. Multivariate analysis identified four variables associated with hospitalization: living alone at home (OR = 3.75), history of cardiovascular disease (OR = 2.54), other chronic medical conditions excluding pulmonary diseases (OR = 4.28) and tachypnea at rest (OR = 3.33). The hospitalization decision by GPs for patients with CAP takes into account social conditions, co-morbid conditions of the patients and the seventy of CAP.