| Literature DB >> 24106542 |
Michael A Lamantia1, Paul W Stewart, Timothy F Platts-Mills, Kevin J Biese, Cory Forbach, Ezequiel Zamora, Brenda K McCall, Frances S Shofer, Charles B Cairns, Jan Busby-Whitehead, John S Kizer.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Triage of patients is critical to patient safety, yet no clear information exists as to the utility of initial vital signs in identifying critically ill older emergency department (ED) patients. The objective of this study is to evaluate a set of initial vital sign thresholds as predictors of severe illness and injury among older adults presenting to the ED.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24106542 PMCID: PMC3789908 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2013.5.13411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Demographic and presenting characteristics of patients aged 75 and above.
| Characteristic | All visits (N=4873) | Visits with severe illness | Visits without severe illness |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex—no. (%) | |||
| Male | 1909 (39.2) | 96 (39.3) | 1813 (39.1) |
| Female | 2964 (60.8) | 148 (60.7) | 2816 (60.8) |
| Age—mean, yr | 82.9 | 82.3 | 82.9 |
| Race or ethnic group—no.(%) | |||
| Black or African American | 893 (18.3) | 40 (16.4) | 853 (18.4) |
| White | 3452 (70.8) | 182 (74.6) | 3270 (70.6) |
| Hispanic or Latino | 40 (0.8) | 4 (1.6) | 36 (0.8) |
| Asian | 25 (0.5) | 1 (0.4) | 24 (0.5) |
| American Indian/Alaska Native | 3 (<0.1) | 1 (0.4) | 2 (0.0) |
| Unknown or not reported | 460 (9.4) | 16 (6.7) | 444 (9.6) |
| Insurance status—no.(%) | |||
| Medicare | 3857 (79.2) | 189 (77.5) | 3668 (79.2) |
| Medicaid | 576 (11.8) | 26 (10.7) | 550 (11.9) |
| Initial vital signs—mean (N) | |||
| Systolic blood pressure—mmHg | 143 (4707) | 136 (202) | 144 (4505) |
| Diastolic blood pressure—mmHg | 74 (4703) | 71 (202) | 74 (4501) |
| Pulse—beats/min | 81 (4771) | 90 (209) | 81 (4562) |
| Respiratory rate—breaths/min | 19 (4748) | 19 (206) | 19 (4542) |
| Oxygen saturation—% | 97 (4215) | 96 (200) | 97 (4015) |
| Temperature—°C | 36.5 (4455) | 36.4 (168) | 36.5 (4287) |
| ESI level | 2.7 | 1.8 | 2.8 |
Severe illness or injury defined by occurrence of intensive care unit admission or death in the emergency department.
Race or ethnic group as recorded in the patient’s chart.
ESI is the emergency severity index score which has five levels; 1=most acute and 5=least acute
Vital signs for prediction of death or intensive care unit admission in patients aged 75 and above.
| Characteristic | No vital signs missing | 0 or 1 vital sign missing | 0, 1 or 2 vital signs missing | 0, 1, 2 or 3 vital signs missing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity[ | 73.2% | 72.1% | 72.2% | 72.2% |
| [65.5, 80.8] | [65.2, 78.9] | [65.4, 78.9] | [65.4, 78.9] | |
| Specificity | 50.0% | 52.4% | 52.6% | 52.7% |
| [48.0, 52.0] | [50.5, 54.2] | [50.8, 54.4] | [50.8, 54.5] | |
| Positive predictive value | 4.6% | 4.1% | 4.5% | 4.5% |
| [2.2, 6.8] | [1.9, 6.3] | [2.3, 6.5] | [2.3, 6.6] | |
| Negative predictive value | 98.1% | 98.4% | 98.2% | 98.2% |
| [97.0, 99.2] | [97.3, 99.3] | [97.2, 99.2] | [97.2, 99.2] | |
| Positive likelihood ratio | 1.47 | 1.51 | 1.52 | 1.53 |
| [1.30, 1.60] | [1.30, 1.60] | [1.30, 1.60] | [1.30, 1.60] | |
| Negative likelihood ratio | 0.54 | 0.53 | 0.53 | 0.53 |
| [0.30, 0.60] | [0.40, 0.60] | [0.40, 0.60] | [0.40, 0.60] | |
| Odds ratio | 2.48 | 2.60 | 2.61 | 2.61 |
| [1.50, 3.30] | [1.70, 3.40] | [1.70, 3.40] | [1.70, 3.40] | |
| Subjects included | 2580 | 2980 | 3007 | 3011 |
| (83.8%) | (96.8%) | (97.7%) | (97.8%) | |
| Visits included | 3848 | 4702 | 4771 | 4779 |
| (79.0%) | (96.5%) | (97.9%) | (98.1%) | |
| Visits excluded | 1025 | 171 | 102 | 94 |
| Patients with 1 visit | 1846 (71.6%) | 2053 (68.9%) | 2062 (68.6%) | 2064 (68.5%) |
| Patients with 2 visits | 449 (17.4%) | 523 (17.6%) | 530 (17.6%) | 531 (17.6%) |
| Patients with 3 visits | 167 (6.5%) | 216 (7.2%) | 219 (7.3%) | 219 (7.3%) |
| Patients with 4 visits | 56 (2.2%) | 101 (3.4%) | 105 (3.5%) | 106 (3.5%) |
| Patients with 5+ visits | 62 (2.4%) | 87 (2.9%) | 91 (3.0%) | 91 (3.0%) |
| Maximum visits | 14 visits | 17 visits | 17 visits | 17 visits |
Estimates with 95% confidence intervals were obtained by fitting a generalized logistic-link regression model with a subject-specific random effect.
Identical results were obtained for “0, 1, 2, 3 or 4 vital signs missing.”
Odds ratios for the association of abnormal vital signs with severe illness or injury.
| Condition | Odds ratio [95% CI] | Included |
|---|---|---|
| Low systolic blood pressure (<100 mmHg) versus normal SBP | 4.53 [2.50, 6.50] | 96.5% |
| High systolic blood pressure (>200 mmHg) versus normal SBP | 1.78 [0.60, 2.90] | 96.5% |
| Any abnormal (low or high) systolic blood pressure versus normal SBP | 3.59 [2.20, 4.90] | 96.5% |
| Low heart rate (<60 beats/min) versus normal HR | 1.17 [0.60, 1.70] | 97.9% |
| High heart rate (>100 beats/min) versus normal HR | 3.42 [2.20, 4.60] | 97.9% |
| Any abnormal (low or high) heart rate versus normal HR | 2.72 [1.90, 3.50] | 97.9% |
| Low respiratory rate (<8 breaths/min) versus normal RR | 384.0 [−560, 1320] | 97.4% |
| High respiratory rate (>20 breaths/min) versus normal RR | 2.04 [1.30, 2.70] | 97.4% |
| Any abnormal (low or high) respiratory rate versus normal RR | 2.50 [1.60, 3.30] | 97.4% |
| Low temperature (<36°C) versus normal temperature | 1.55 [0.90, 2.20] | 91.4% |
| High temperature (>38°C) versus normal temperature | 0.95 [0.00, 1.90] | 91.4% |
| Any abnormal (low or high) temperature versus normal temperature | 1.47 [0.80, 2.00] | 91.4% |
| Low oxygen saturation (<90%) versus normal oxygen saturation | 3.49 [1.50, 5.40] | 86.3% |
| Normal oxygen saturation (90–100%) versus abnormal oxygen saturation | 0.29 [0.10, 0.40] | 86.3% |
| Any abnormal vital sign versus all vital signs normal | 2.48 [1.50, 3.30] | 79.0% |
Percent of visits included. Visit excluded if the vital sign was missing.
Low respiratory rates were recorded in 9 patients.