Literature DB >> 12762272

Diagnostic pathway of syncope and analysis of the impact of guidelines in a district general hospital. The ECSIT study (epidemiology and costs of syncope in Trento).

Maurizio Del Greco1, Susanna Cozzio, Marco Scillieri, Francesca Caprari, Alessandro Scivales, Marcello Disertori.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The ECSIT study was aimed at evaluating the hospital management of syncope patients, at comparing the appropriateness and costs of the hospital diagnostic pathway before (phase 1) and after (phase 2) the introduction of new guidelines and at analyzing the physicians' compliance to the guidelines.
METHODS: All syncope patients admitted to the emergency room between August 1 and October 31, 1999 (phase 1) and between March 1 and May 31, 2000 (phase 2) were enrolled and their clinical records were analyzed in a blind fashion.
RESULTS: During the study 538 consecutive patients came to the emergency room for syncope with a hospitalization rate of 53% in phase 1 (n = 151) and of 42% in phase 2 (n = 107). The in-hospital stay increased from 9 days in phase 1 to 11.3 days in phase 2 and diagnostic tests from 2.6 per patient (phase 1) to 2.9 per patient (phase 2) with total costs that rose from [symbol: see text] 3,474 to [symbol: see text] 3,647. Patients with no diagnosis decreased from 51 to 45.8% and the principal causes were identified as vascular brain disease (36.1 vs 33.7%) and neurally-mediated mechanisms (35.3 vs 42.2%).
CONCLUSIONS: Despite the high costs of syncope management, the appropriateness and efficacy of the hospital diagnostic pathway remains far from ideal and simply introducing new guidelines seems unable to modify clinical practice.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12762272

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ital Heart J        ISSN: 1129-471X


  3 in total

1.  Randomized clinical trial of an emergency department observation syncope protocol versus routine inpatient admission.

Authors:  Benjamin C Sun; Heather McCreath; Li-Jung Liang; Stephen Bohan; Christopher Baugh; Luna Ragsdale; Sean O Henderson; Carol Clark; Aveh Bastani; Emmett Keeler; Ruopeng An; Carol M Mangione
Journal:  Ann Emerg Med       Date:  2013-11-13       Impact factor: 5.721

2.  Near-universal hospitalization of US emergency department patients with cancer and febrile neutropenia.

Authors:  Christopher W Baugh; Mohammad Kamal Faridi; Emily L Mueller; Carlos A Camargo; Daniel J Pallin
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-05-23       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Risk stratification of adult emergency department syncope patients to predict short-term serious outcomes after discharge (RiSEDS) study.

Authors:  Venkatesh Thiruganasambandamoorthy; Ian G Stiell; Marco L A Sivilotti; Heather Murray; Brian H Rowe; Eddy Lang; Andrew McRae; Robert Sheldon; George A Wells
Journal:  BMC Emerg Med       Date:  2014-03-14
  3 in total

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