Literature DB >> 1610036

Geriatric patient emergency visits. Part I: Comparison of visits by geriatric and younger patients.

B M Singal1, J R Hedges, E W Rousseau, A B Sanders, E Berstein, R M McNamara, T M Hogan.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To describe emergency department use by the elderly, to define problems associated with emergency care of the elderly, and to compare these results with those for younger adult patients.
DESIGN: Retrospective, controlled chart review.
SETTING: Six geographically distinct US hospital EDs. PARTICIPANTS: From each site, a stratified sample (approximately 7:3) of elderly (65 years or older) and nonelderly (21 to 64 years old) control patients treated during the same time period was used.
METHODS: Standardized review of ED records and billing charges. Comparisons of elderly and control patient groups using chi 2 analysis and Mann-Whitney U test (alpha = 0.05).
RESULTS: Four hundred eighteen elderly patients and 175 nonelderly controls were entered into the study. The elderly were more likely to arrive by ambulance (35% versus 11%; P less than .00001). More elderly than controls presented with conditions of either high or intermediate urgency (78% versus 61%; P less than .0003). The elderly more frequently presented with comorbid diseases (94% versus 63%; P less than .00001). Other findings for the elderly included a longer mean stay in the ED (185 versus 155 minutes; P less than .003), higher laboratory (78% versus 53%; P less than .00001) and radiology (77% versus 52%; P less than .00001) test rates, higher mean overall care charges ($471 versus $344; P less than .00001), and an admission rate (47% versus 19%; P less than .00001) twice that of younger adults.
CONCLUSION: Resource use and charges associated with emergency care are higher for the elderly than for younger patients. Increases in emergency resources and personnel or improvement in efficiency will be needed to maintain emergency care at present levels as the US population continues to grow and age.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1610036     DOI: 10.1016/s0196-0644(05)81025-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Emerg Med        ISSN: 0196-0644            Impact factor:   5.721


  33 in total

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Authors:  Christopher R Carpenter; Elizabeth R Bassett; Grant M Fischer; Jonathan Shirshekan; James E Galvin; John C Morris
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4.  Development of geriatric competencies for emergency medicine residents using an expert consensus process.

Authors:  Teresita M Hogan; Eve D Losman; Christopher R Carpenter; Karen Sauvigne; Cheryl Irmiter; Linda Emanuel; Rosanne M Leipzig
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Authors:  Michael A LaMantia; Timothy F Platts-Mills; Kevin Biese; Christine Khandelwal; Cory Forbach; Charles B Cairns; Jan Busby-Whitehead; John S Kizer
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6.  The Six-Item Screener and AD8 for the detection of cognitive impairment in geriatric emergency department patients.

Authors:  Christopher R Carpenter; Bobby DesPain; Travis N Keeling; Mansi Shah; Morgan Rothenberger
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7.  Substituting home care for hospitalization: the role of a quick response service for the elderly.

Authors:  K Brazil; C Bolton; D Ulrichsen; C Knott
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8.  Does gender influence emergency department management and outcomes in geriatric abdominal pain?

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9.  Treatment-limiting decisions, comorbidities, and mortality in the emergency departments: a cross-sectional elderly population-based study.

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10.  Psychiatric emergency services for the U.S. elderly: 2008 and beyond.

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