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1.
Objective: Emergency department (ED) triage for acute cardiac ischemia in the primary teaching hospital in Geneva, Switzerland, is very accurate, but at the cost of very long ED stays. Thus, the authors sought: 1) to determine the impact of the acute cardiac ischemia time-insensitive predictive instrument (ACI-TIPI), incorporated into a computerized electrocardiograph, on length of stay and speed of triage decision making for ED patients presenting with symptoms suggesting acute cardiac ischemia, and 2) to study the ACI-TIPI’s impact on physicians of different training levels. Design: A seven-month prospective clinical trial with alternating-month experimental and control periods. Setting: An urban major teaching hospital in Geneva, Switzerland. Participants: Patients over the age of 18 years presenting to the ED with chest pain or other symptoms suggesting acute cardiac ischemia (acute myocardial infarction or unstable angina pectoris). Emergency department physicians, classified as novice (those in their first ED rotations) and experienced (those in their second or later ED rotations). Patients staying overnight in the ED (n=111) were excluded from the analysis. Intervention: During the experimental months, the computerized electrocardiograph printed the ACI-TIPI probability of acute cardiac ischemia at the top of each subject’s electrocardiogram. During control months, the probability was not provided. Measurements and main results: Among the 418 study subjects, for patients with acute ischemia seen by novice clinicians, the use of the ACI-TIPI decreased ED time from presentation to triage decision and ED release by 0.7 hour (19%) (p=0.007). Subgroup analyses for patients with acute myocardial infarction, patients with unstable angina pectoris, and patients given thrombolytic therapy also showed analogous decreases in ED time consistent with this finding. Other key determinants of ED length of stay included: age, whether the coronary care unit was full, whether patients received thrombolytic therapy, and whether admission was during the night shift. The experimental and control groups did not differ in triage disposition appropriateness or mortality. Conclusions: For ED patients with acute cardiac ischemia evaluated by novice clinicians, the ACI-TIPI substantially speeded ED decision making and triage. The suggestion of an impact on different cardiac ischemia subgroups and mortality deserves further larger clinical trials.  相似文献   

2.
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationships among B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) levels within the diagnostic range, perceived congestive heart failure (CHF) severity, clinical decision making, and outcomes of the CHF patients presenting to emergency department (ED). BACKGROUND: Since BNP correlates with the presence of CHF, disease severity, and prognosis, we hypothesized that BNP levels in the diagnostic range offer value independent of physician decision making with regard to critical outcomes in emergency medicine. METHODS: The Rapid Emergency Department Heart failure Outpatient Trial (REDHOT) study was a 10-center trial in which patients seen in the ED with shortness of breath were consented to have BNP levels drawn on arrival. Entrance criteria included a BNP level >100 pg/ml. Physicians were blinded to the actual BNP level and subsequent BNP measurements. Patients were followed up for 90 days after discharge. RESULTS: Of the 464 patients, 90% were hospitalized. Two-thirds of patients were perceived to be New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class III or IV. The BNP levels did not differ significantly between patients who were discharged home from the ED and those admitted (976 vs. 766, p = 0.6). Using logistic regression analysis, an ED doctor's intention to admit or discharge a patient had no influence on 90-day outcomes, while the BNP level was a strong predictor of 90-day outcome. Of admitted patients, 11% had BNP levels <200 pg/ml (66% of which were perceived NYHA functional class III or IV). The 90-day combined event rate (CHF visits or admissions and mortality) in the group of patients admitted with BNP <200 pg/ml and >200 pg/ml was 9% and 29%, respectively (p = 0.006). CONCLUSIONS: In patients presenting to the ED with heart failure, there is a disconnect between the perceived severity of CHF by ED physicians and severity as determined by BNP levels. The BNP levels can predict future outcomes and thus may aid physicians in making triage decisions about whether to admit or discharge patients. Emerging clinical data will help further refine biomarker-guided outpatient therapeutic and monitoring strategies involving BNP.  相似文献   

3.
Background and objective: Appropriate triage of patients with community‐acquired pneumonia (CAP) may improve morbidity, mortality and use of hospital resources. Worse outcomes from delayed intensive care unit (ICU) admission have long been suspected but have not been verified. Methods: In a retrospective study of consecutive patients with CAP admitted from 1996–2006 to the ICUs of a tertiary care hospital, we measured serial severity scores, intensive therapies received, ICU‐free days, and 30‐day mortality. Primary outcome was mortality. We developed a regression model of mortality with ward triage (and subsequent ICU transfer within 72 h) as the predictor, controlled by propensity for ward triage and radiographic progression. Results: Of 1059 hospital‐admitted patients, 269 (25%) were admitted to the ICU during hospitalization. Of those, 167 were directly admitted to the ICU without current requirement for life support, while 61 (23%) were initially admitted to the hospital ward, 50 of those undergoing ICU transfer within 72 h. Ward triage was associated with increased mortality (OR 2.6, P = 0.056) after propensity adjustment. The effect was less (OR 2.2, P = 0.12) after controlling for radiographic progression. The effect probably increased (OR 4.1, P = 0.07) among patients with ≥ 3 severity predictors at admission. Conclusions: Initial ward triage among patients transferred to the ICU is associated with twofold higher 30‐day mortality. This effect is most apparent among patients with ≥ 3 severity predictors at admission and is attenuated by controlling for radiographic progression. Intensive monitoring of ward‐admitted patients with CAP seems warranted. Further research is needed to optimize triage in CAP.  相似文献   

4.
PURPOSE: To determine whether the experience of the physician (as measured by postgraduate training level or time during the academic year) who performs the initial evaluation affects the triage of patients with acute chest pain. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Prospective data on the presenting clinical features, initial triage, final diagnosis, and complications were collected for 7,857 patients who presented to the emergency rooms of three teaching hospitals, including 1,118 (14%) with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), 2,477 (32%) with acute ischemic heart disease (AIHD) (i.e., AMI or unstable angina), and 335 (4%) with major complications. The experience of the evaluating physicians, who were in their first three postgraduate years in 93% of cases, was measured in three ways: (1) postgraduate training level, (2) month during the academic year, and (3) number of patients with acute chest pain previously evaluated. Multivariate logistic regression analyses that adjusted for hospital site and 20 clinical variables estimated the odds ratios for admission to the coronary care unit (CCU) and hospital associated with each incremental increase in physician experience. RESULTS: With more experience (as measured by postgraduate training level or time during the academic year), the sensitivity of physicians for admitting patients with AMI, AIHD, or major complications to the hospital increased. For example, each incremental increase in postgraduate training level carried a 1.4 increase in the adjusted odds ratio for admission of a patient with AIHD to the hospital (p less than 0.05), corresponding to an increase in the probability of admission from 93% to 97%. However, increasing physician experience was also associated with an elevated false-positive rate in admitting patients without these diagnoses to the CCU and hospital. Thus, each incremental increase in postgraduate training level carried a 1.2 increase in the adjusted odds ratio for admission of a patient without AIHD to the CCU and hospital (p less than 0.005), corresponding to an increase in the probability of admission from 34% to 47%. By receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC) regression analyses, these changes in triage patterns were consistent with movement along a single ROC curve, rather than a shift to a new or better ROC curve. CONCLUSIONS: As the experience of the physician who performed the initial evaluation increased, there was a lower threshold for admitting all patients with and without AMI, AIHD, or major complications to the CCU and hospital without a detectable improvement in diagnostic accuracy.  相似文献   

5.
Objective: To describe and compare the treatment of acute asthma exacerbations in children given in the emergency department (ED) and admitted to acute care floor in the hospital or intensive care unit (ICU). Methods: A retrospective chart review of visits for acute exacerbation of asthma treated at Phoenix Children's Hospital between January 1, 2014 and December 31, 2016. Results: A total of 287 asthma exacerbation cases were identified including 106 (37%) ED visits, 134 (47%) hospital floor and 47 (16%) ICU admissions. A history of a previous ED visit (ED 88%, Floor 60% and ICU 68%; p < 0.0001) and prior pulmonology inpatient consultation (ED 30%, Floor 19% and ICU 15%; p = 0.05) varied significantly. Pulmonology inpatient consultations were performed more frequently in the ICU than on the hospital floor (54% versus 8%; p < 0.0001). Although overall 145 (51%) of the cases were already on inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) at the time of visit with no differences across locations, ICS initiation/step-up was greater in the ICU (72%) than on the hospital floor (54%) and ED (2%) (p < 0.0001). A recommendation given to the family for follow-up with pulmonology was more frequent for patients who had been admitted to the ICU (68%) as compared to those only admitted to the floor (31%) or ED (4%) (p < 0.0001). Readmission rates were similar for patients previously admitted to the hospital (Floor 42%; ICU 40%), but significantly higher for previous ED visits (77%) (p < 0.0001). Conclusions: Physicians in the ED have an opportunity to provide preventative care in the acute care setting and should be encouraged to initiate treatment with ICS. Consideration should be given to develop a program or clinical pathway focused on long-term asthma management and maintenance to reduce readmissions and long hospital stays.  相似文献   

6.
OBJECTIVE: Patients with systemic rheumatic disease constitute a small percentage of admissions to the medical intensive care units (ICUs). Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is one of the rheumatic diseases that together with secondary complications may lead to a critical illness requiring hospitalization in the ICU. We present the features, clinical course and outcome of critically ill patients with scleroderma that were admitted to the ICU. METHODS: The medical records of nine patients with diagnosis of scleroderma (8 female, 1 male), admitted to the intensive care unit of Sheba Medical Center during the 11-year interval between 1991 and 2002, were reviewed. RESULTS: The mean age of the patients at the time of admission to the ICU was 48 +/- 13 [SD] years.The mean duration of SSc from diagnosis to the ICU admission was 8 +/- 8 years. Six patients had diffuse SSc, two patients had limited SSc and one patient had juvenile diffuse morphea. The main reasons for admission to the ICU were: infection/ septic syndrome (n = 4), scleroderma renal crisis (SRC) with pulmonary congestion (n = 2), acute renal failure associated with diffuse alveolar hemorrhage namely scleroderma- pulmonary - renal syndrome (SPRS) (n = 1), iatrogenic pericardial tamponade (n = 1), mesenteric ischemia (n = 1). The patients had high severity illness score (mean APACHE II 25 +/- 3). Eight out of nine patients (89%) that were admitted to the ICU died during the hospitalization, six (66.6%) of them died in the ICU. Septic complications as the main cause of death were determined in five patients (62.5%), while four of them had pneumonia and acute respiratory failure along with underlying severe pulmonary fibrosis. Lungs and kidneys were the most common severely affected organs by SSc in our patients. CONCLUSION: The outcome of scleroderma patients admitted to the ICU was extremely poor. Infectious complication was the most common cause of death in our patients. Although infections are treatable, the high mortality rate for this group of patients was dependent on the severity of the underlying visceral organ involvement, particularly severe pulmonary fibrosis. The severity of this involvement is a poor outcome predictor. An early diagnosis and an appropriate treatment of such complications may help to reduce the mortality in scleroderma patients.  相似文献   

7.
Demand for critical care services is increasing. Unless the supply of intensivists increases, critically ill patients will not have access to intensivists. Recent critical care society recommendations include increased graduate medical education support and expansion of the J-1 visa waiver program for foreign medical graduates. This article proposes additional recommendations, based on strengthening the relationship between emergency medicine and critical care medicine. Critical care is a continuum that includes out-of-hospital, emergency department (ED), and ICU care teams. Both emergency medicine and critical care medicine require expertise in treating life-threatening acute illness, with many critically ill patients often presenting first to the ED. Increased patient volumes and acuity have resulted in longer ED lengths of stay and more critical care delivery in the ED. However, the majority of critical care medicine fellowships do not accept emergency medicine residents, and those who do successfully complete a fellowship do not have access to a US certification examination in critical care medicine. Despite these barriers, interest in critical care medicine training among emergency physicians is increasing. Dual emergency medicine- and critical care medicine-trained physicians will not only help alleviate the intensivist shortage but also strengthen critical care delivery in the ED and facilitate coordination at the ED-ICU interface. We therefore propose that all accreditation bodies work cooperatively to create a route to critical care medicine certification for emergency physicians who complete a critical care fellowship.  相似文献   

8.
The emergency department (ED) is an essential component of the public health response plan for control of acute respiratory infectious threats. Effective respiratory hygiene in the ED is imperative to limit the spread of dangerous respiratory pathogens, including influenza, severe acute respiratory syndrome, avian influenza, and bioterrorism agents, particularly given that these agents may not be immediately identifiable. Sustaining effective respiratory control measures is especially challenging in the ED because of patient crowding, inadequate staffing and resources, and ever-increasing numbers of immunocompromised patients. Threat of contagion exists not only for ED patients but also for visitors, health care workers, and inpatient populations. Potential physical sites for respiratory disease transmission extend from out-of-hospital care, to triage, waiting room, ED treatment area, and the hospital at large. This article presents a summary of the most current information available in the literature about respiratory hygiene in the ED, including administrative, patient, and legal issues. Wherever possible, specific recommendations and references to practical information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are provided. The "Administrative Issues" section describes coordination with public health departments, procedures for effective facility planning, and measures for health care worker protection (education, staffing optimization, and vaccination). The patient care section addresses the potentially infected ED patient, including emergency medical services concerns, triage planning, and patient transport. "Legal Issues" discusses the interplay between public safety and patient privacy. Emergency physicians play a critical role in early identification, treatment, and containment of potentially lethal respiratory pathogens. This brief synopsis should help clinicians and administrators understand, develop, and implement appropriate policies and procedures to address respiratory hygiene in the ED.  相似文献   

9.
Patients having systemic rheumatic diseases constitute a small percentage of admissions to the medical intensive care units (ICUs). Dermatomyositis (DM) is one of the rheumatic diseases that have secondary complications that may lead to a critical illness requiring hospitalization in the ICU. Herein, we present the features, clinical course, and outcome of critically ill patients having DM who were admitted to the ICU. The medical records of six DM patients admitted to the ICU in a large tertiary hospital in a 12-year period were reviewed. The mean age of patients at time of admission to the ICU was 38 (range 16–37). Mean disease duration from diagnosis to admission to the ICU was 1.6 years (range 1 month–8 years), while the main reason for admission to the ICU was acute respiratory failure. Two of six patients died during the hospitalization. The main causes of death were respiratory complications and sepsis. The outcome of DM patients admitted to the ICU was generally not different from the outcome of other patients hospitalized in the ICU. The main reason for hospitalization was acute respiratory failure. As there are many reasons for respiratory failure in DM, an early diagnosis and aggressive appropriate treatment may help to further reduce the mortality in these patients.  相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate outcome predictors of patients with cirrhosis admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU). METHODS: One hundred and twenty-nine consecutive patients with cirrhosis admitted to the ICU at a tertiary care transplant centre in Saudi Arabia between March 1999 and December 2000 were entered prospectively in an ICU database. Liver transplantation patients and readmissions to the ICU were excluded. The following data were documented: demographic features, severity of illness measures, parameters of organ failure, presence of gastrointestinal bleeding, and sepsis. The need for mechanical ventilation, renal replacement therapy and pulmonary artery catheter placement was recorded. The primary endpoint was hospital outcome. RESULTS: Cirrhotic patients admitted to the ICU had high hospital mortality (73.6%). However, the actual mortality was not significantly different from the predicted mortality using prediction systems. There was an association between the number of organs failing and mortality. Coma and acute renal failure emerged as independent predictors of mortality. All patients who were monitored with pulmonary artery catheterisation in this study died. Patients requiring mechanical ventilation and renal replacement therapy had very high mortalities (84% and 89%, respectively). All 13 cirrhotic patients admitted to ICU immediately post-cardiac arrest in this study died. CONCLUSIONS: Cirrhotic patients admitted to ICU have a poor prognosis, especially when admitted with coma, acute renal failure or post-cardiac arrest. The consistently poor prognosis associated with certain ICU interventions should raise new awareness regarding limitations of medical therapy. These mortality statistics compel a critical re-examination of uniformly aggressive life support for the critically ill cirrhotic patient, a percentage of whom will not benefit from invasive measures.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE: Sepsis is a frequent and often lethal condition. Rapid identification and aggressive therapy in the emergency department (ED) are essential for outcome. Several indexes were found to be significantly related to short-term clinical outcome, but only bedside, rapidly available tests are thought to be useful in the ED. To define the prevalence and mortality of patients with severe sepsis presenting to the ED of a tertiary care hospital in Italy, we furthermore investigated the ability of bedside, non-invasive prognostic indexes to identify patients with adverse short-term clinical outcome. METHODS: All patients admitted to the ED with a diagnosis of severe sepsis or septic shock were included. Retrospective data were collected by a dedicated software program using predefined searching criteria including clinical data, vital sign parameters, sepsis-related organ failure assessment (SOFA) score, and blood tests. The relationship between prognostic indexes and 24-h or 28-day mortality was evaluated by multivariate logistic regression analysis. RESULTS: Ninety patients were enrolled from June 2004 to June 2005 (0.2% of all incoming patients to ED and 0.7% of all critical patients). Mean age was 77 +/- 15 years, 54.4% were women. During follow-up (28 days) 46 patients died (51.1%), 21 patients (23.3%) within 24 h. At multivariate analyses, age >80 (odds ratio [OR] 4.10; 95% confidence intervals [CI] 1.39-11.90, p = 0.01), serum lactate >5 mmol/l (OR 3.40; 95% CI 1.21-9.60, p = 0.02) and acute renal failure (OR 18.90; 95% CI 1.80-200, p = 0.02) were independent predictors of 28-day mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Among critical patients admitted to an Italian ED, those with severe sepsis/septic shock represent about 1%, with a very high mortality rate. Bedside non-invasive prognostic indexes are able to identify with high accuracy patients with adverse short-term clinical outcome.  相似文献   

12.

Background

We evaluated the effect of time spent in the emergency department (ED) and process of care on mortality and length of hospital stay in patients with sepsis or septic shock.

Methods

An observational cohort study was conducted on 117 patients who came through the University of Louisville Hospital ED and subsequently were directly admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). Variables of interest were time in the ED from triage to physical transport to the ICU, from triage to antibiotic(s) ordered, and from triage to antibiotic(s) administered. Expected mortality was calculated according to the University Health System Consortium Database. Primary and secondary outcomes were in-hospital death and hospital length of stay in days, respectively.

Results

We found no significant association between time in the ED and mortality between survivors and nonsurvivors (5.5 versus 5.7 hours, P = 0.804). After adjusting for expected mortality, a 22% increase in mortality risk was found for each hour delay from triage to antibiotic(s) ordered; a 15% increase in mortality risk was observed for each hour from triage to antibiotic(s) given. Both time from triage to antibiotic(s) ordered (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.8, P = 0.044) and time from triage to antibiotic(s) delivery (HR = 0.79, P = 0.0092) were independently associated with an increased hospital stay (HR = 0.79, P = 0.0092).

Conclusion

Though no significant association between mortality and ED time was demonstrated, we observed a significant increase in mortality in septic patients with both delays in antibiotic(s) order and administration. Delay in care also resulted in increased hospital stays both overall and in the ICU.  相似文献   

13.
14.
PURPOSE: Little is known about physicians' triage decisions for patients with chest pain in the emergency department. We sought to understand better the variability and accuracy of physicians' triage decisions. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We used 20 simulated cases to compare triage decisions by 147 physicians (46 emergency medicine, 87 internal medicine, and 14 cardiology physicians) with triage decisions recommended by a previously validated prediction rule. We calculated triage sensitivity and specificity using the prediction rule to estimate the likelihood that each of the simulated patients would suffer a major complication. Triage sensitivity was defined as the proportion of all patients expected to have major complications who were triaged to the coronary care or inpatient telemetry unit. RESULTS: Triage specificity was defined as the proportion of all patients without complications who were triaged to sites other than the coronary care or inpatient telemetry unit.Physicians' triage decisions were less sensitive (85% vs. 96%, P <0.001) and less specific (38% vs. 41%, P = 0.02) than decisions recommended by the prediction rule. Physicians overestimated patients' risk of complications and triaged more patients to inpatient monitored beds. Despite their preference for inpatient monitored beds, physicians' decisions would have resulted in four times as many major complications in patients who were not triaged to inpatient monitored beds, compared with decisions recommended by the prediction rule (2.4% vs. 0.6%, P <0.001). Although physicians' decisions were best explained by their provisional diagnoses, interphysician agreement about triage decisions (kappa = 0.34) and diagnosis (kappa = 0.31) was only fair. CONCLUSIONS: In simulated cases, physicians' triage decisions varied widely and their predictions of patient outcomes differed markedly from that of the validated prediction rule, suggesting that use of the prediction rule in the emergency department could improve physicians' decisions and patients' outcomes.  相似文献   

15.
Study objectives: Treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in the emergency department (ED) or hospital accounts for a significant portion of COPD costs. This study estimates the cost of a COPD ED or hospitalization visit in the US. Design: This observational study utilized administrative data from 218 acute care hospitals. ED/hospital discharges for COPD (International Classification of Diseases — Ninth Revision — Clinical Modification codes 491.xx. 492.xx, 496.xx) during 2001 were identified. Costs were determined for three groups: (i) ED only; (ii) standard admission; and (iii) severe admissions (intensive care unit [ICU] or intubation). Severe admissions were stratified into: (i) ICU/no intubation; (ii) intubation/no ICU; and (iii) ICU + intubation. Mean total costs and length of stay (LOS) were calculated for each group. Results: A total of 59 735 ED/hospital encounters were identified: 20 431 ED only, 33 210 standard admissions, and 6094 severe admissions (4456 ICU/no intubation, 496 intubation/no ICU, and 1142 ICU/intubation). ED visits had a mean cost of $US571 ± 507 (year 2001 value). Inpatient costs ranged from $US5997 (± 5752) for a standard admission to $US36 743 (± 62 886) for ICU plus intubation admissions, while LOS ranged from 5.1 days (±4.5) to 14.8 days (± 16.7), respectively. In addition, only 10% of encounters required an intubation/ICU admission, but these accounted for 34% of the cost. Conclusion: Cost of a COPD hospitalization is substantial in the US, with one-third of those costs being associated with severe admissions, which make up only 10% of all COPD admissions. Treatments aimed at reducing hospitalizations and length of stay could result in substantial cost savings.  相似文献   

16.
Intensivist-to-bed ratio: association with outcomes in the medical ICU   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Dara SI  Afessa B 《Chest》2005,128(2):567-572
OBJECTIVE: With an increasing number of critical care beds, a shortage of critical care physicians, and pressure from purchasers, there is a need to define the optimal intensivist-to-ICU bed ratio. The objective of this study was to determine if there are any associations between the intensivist-to-ICU bed ratio and the outcome of patients admitted to the medical ICU. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING: A tertiary care medical center. PATIENTS: All critically ill patients admitted to a medical ICU between December 8, 2001, and July 14, 2003. INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS: Demographics, APACHE (acute physiology and chronic health evaluation) III-predicted mortality, ICU length of stay (LOS), hospital LOS, and ICU and hospital mortality rates. Four time periods based on intensivist-to-ICU bed ratios of 1:7.5, 1:9.5, 1:12, and 1:15 were identified. Regression analyses were performed to develop customized models to predict ICU and hospital LOS and mortality. The ICU LOS ratio, defined as the ratio of the observed to predicted LOS, and standardized mortality ratio (SMR) were calculated for each of the four periods. RESULTS: A total of 2,492 patients were included in the study. There was no difference in the severity of illness at the time of ICU admission among the four periods. The mean ICU LOS ratio was longer for an intensivist-to-ICU bed ratio of 1:15 compared to the other periods. The ICU and hospital SMR did not differ significantly among the four periods. CONCLUSION: Differences in intensivist-to-ICU bed ratios, ranging from 1:7.5 to 1:15, were not associated with differences in ICU or hospital mortality. However, a ratio of 1:15 was associated with increased ICU LOS.  相似文献   

17.
The current disease‐oriented, episodic model of emergency care does not adequately address the complex needs of older adults presenting to emergency departments (EDs). Dedicated ED facilities with a specific organization (e.g., geriatric EDs (GEDs)) have been advocated. One of the few GED experiences in the world is described and its outcomes compared with those of a conventional ED (CED). In a secondary analysis of a prospective observational cohort of 200 acutely ill elderly patients presenting to two urban EDs in Ancona, Italy, identifiers and triage, clinical, and social data were collected and the following outcomes considered: early (30‐day) and late (6‐month) ED revisit, frequent ED return, hospital admission, and functional decline. Death, functional decline, any ED revisit and any hospital admission were also considered as a composite outcome. Odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated. Overall, GED patients were older and frailer than CED patients. The two EDs did not differ in terms of early, late, or frequent ED return or in 6‐month hospital admission or functional decline. The mortality rate was slightly but significantly lower in the GED patients (hazard ratio=0.47, 95% CI=0.22–0.99, P=.047). The data suggest noninferiority and, indirectly, a slight superiority for the GED system in the acute care of elderly people, supporting the hypothesis that ED facilities specially designed for older adults may provide better care.  相似文献   

18.
The authors studied the clinical courses of 216 prospectively selected patients with cardiogenic pulmonary edema presenting to an emergency ward (EW) to identify which patients should be triaged to the intensive care unit (ICU). The first four hours were considered the EW or pre-triage phase of hospitalization. During the EW phase, 108 patients remained stable; 33 of them developed cardiopulmonary complications over the next two days. Logistic regression identified four significant independent features that distinguished these 33 patients from the remaining patients: four-hour diuresis less than 1L, history of prior pulmonary edema, T-wave abnormalities, and jugular venous distention. A model containing the four variables predicted hospital complications with a sensitivity of 81% and a specificity of 65%. In comparison, the sensitivity of physicians in admitting to the ICU patients who would go on to have complications was 70%, with a specificity of 63%. In a model containing a term for the physicians' actual triage decision, all four independent predictors remained significant, producing an overall sensitivity of 81% and an overall specificity of 69%.  相似文献   

19.
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to assess whether the immediate availability of serum markers would increase the appropriate use of thrombolytic therapy. BACKGROUND: Serum markers such as myoglobin and creatine kinase, MB fraction (CK-MB) are effective in detecting acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in the emergency setting. Appropriate candidates for thrombolytic therapy are not always identified in the emergency department (ED), as 20% to 30% of eligible patients go untreated, representing 10% to 15% of all patients with AMI. Patients presenting with chest pain consistent with acute coronary syndrome were evaluated in the EDs of 12 hospitals throughout North America. METHODS: In this randomized, controlled clinical trial, physicians received either the immediate myoglobin/CK-MB results at 0 and 1 h after enrollment (stat) or conventional reporting of myoglobin/CK-MB 3 h or more after hospital admission (control). The primary end point was the comparison of the proportion of patients within the stat group versus control group who received appropriate thrombolytic therapy. Secondary end points included the emergent use of any reperfusion treatment in both groups, initial hospital disposition of patients (coronary care unit, monitor or nonmonitor beds) and the proportion of patients appropriately discharged from the ED. RESULTS: Of 6,352 patients enrolled, 814 (12.8%) were diagnosed as having AMI. For patients having AMI, there were no statistically significant differences in the proportion of patients treated with thrombolytic therapy between the stat and control groups (15.1% vs. 17.1%, p = 0.45). When only patients with ST segment elevation on their initial electrocardiogram were compared, there were still no significant differences between the groups. Also, there was no difference in the hospital placement of patients in critical care and non- critical care beds. The availability of early markers was associated with more hospital admissions as compared to the control group, as the number of patients discharged from the ED was decreased in the stat versus control groups (28.4% vs. 31.5%, p = 0.023). CONCLUSIONS: The availability of 0- and 1-h myoglobin and CK-MB results after ED evaluation had no effect on the use of thrombolytic therapy for patients presenting with AMI, and it slightly increased the number of patients admitted to the hospital who had no evidence of acute myocardial necrosis.  相似文献   

20.
Older emergency department (ED) patients have complex medical, social, and physical problems. We established a program at four ED sites to improve case finding of at-risk older adults and provide comprehensive assessment in the ED setting with formal linkage to community agencies. The objectives of the program are to (1) improve case finding of at-risk older ED patients, (2) improve care planning and referral for those returning home, and (3) create a coordinated network of existing medical and community services. The four sites are a 1,000-bed teaching center, a 700-bed county teaching hospital, a 400-bed community hospital, and a health maintenance organization (HMO) ED site. Ten community agencies also participated in the study: four agencies associated with the hospital/HMO sites, two nonprofit private agencies, and four public agencies. Case finding is done using a simple screening assessment completed by the primary or triage nurse. A geriatric clinical nurse specialist (GCNS) further assesses those considered at risk. Patients with unmet medical, social, or health needs are referred to their primary physicians or to outpatient geriatric evaluation and management centers and to community agencies. After 18 months, the program has been successfully implemented at all four sites. Primary nurses screened over 70% (n = 28,437) of all older ED patients, GCNSs conducted 3,757 comprehensive assessments, participating agency referrals increased sixfold, and few patients refused the GCNS assessment or subsequent referral services. Thus, case finding and community linkage programs for at-risk older adults are feasible in the ED setting.  相似文献   

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