| Literature DB >> 26271919 |
Marian J Vermeulen1, Astrid Guttmann1, Therese A Stukel1, Ashif Kachra1, Marco L A Sivilotti2, Brian H Rowe3, Jonathan Dreyer4, Robert Bell5, Michael Schull1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We sought to determine whether patients seen in hospitals who had reduced overall emergency department (ED) length of stay (LOS) in the 2 years following the introduction of the Ontario Emergency Room Wait Time Strategy were more likely to experience improvements in other measures of ED quality of care for three important conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency department; Health policy; Healthcare quality improvement; Performance measures
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26271919 PMCID: PMC4941160 DOI: 10.1136/bmjqs-2015-004189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Qual Saf ISSN: 2044-5415 Impact factor: 7.035
Characteristics of participating EDs
| Characteristics | Improved sites | Non-improved sites |
|---|---|---|
| Number of patient charts | 4319 | 4498 |
| Number of EDs | 11 | 13 |
| Number of teaching EDs | 2 | 1 |
| Number of cases, mean (SD) | ||
| AMI | 118 (14) | 104 (0) |
| Asthma | 123 (11) | 106 (0) |
| Adult fracture | 92 (1) | 78 (0) |
| Paediatric fracture | 60 (17) | 58 (0) |
| Fiscal year 2008 ED length of stay (h)*, median (IQR) | 4.2 (2.4–7.2) | 3.6 (2.1–6.0) |
| Fiscal year 2008 time to physician assessment (h)*†, median (IQR) | 1.8 (0.8–3.3) | 1.5 (0.8–2.7) |
| Average annual ED volume, mean (SD) | 53 657 (16 160) | 53 958 (11 149) |
| Relative change in median ED length of stay (%)*, range | −26% to −15% | 0% to 47% |
| Absolute change in median ED length of stay (min)*, range | −63 to −37 | 0 to 91 |
*Calculated for all ED patients.
†Calculated from triage or registration (whichever was earlier) to initial physician assessment.
AMI, acute myocardial infarction; ED, emergency department.
Safety and effectiveness outcomes among study patients in fiscal years 2008 and 2010 according to improvement in ED length of stay
| Improved sites | Non-improved sites | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2008 | 2010 | 2008 | 2010 | |||||
| Safety/effectiveness outcome | N | n (%) | N | n (%) | N | n (%) | N | n (%) |
| AMI reperfusion—eligible patients | 166 | 119 (71.7) | 103 | 62 (60.2) | 203 | 107 (52.7) | 159 | 76 (47.8) |
| AMI reperfusion—eligible STEMIs | 129 | 112 (86.8) | 67 | 57 (85.1) | 108 | 98 (90.7) | 72 | 68 (94.4) |
| AMI ASA | 652 | 547 (83.9) | 642 | 522 (81.3) | 676 | 522 (77.2) | 676 | 548 (81.1) |
| Asthma lung function test | 682 | 172 (25.2) | 669 | 165 (24.7) | 689 | 145 (21.0) | 689 | 147 (21.3) |
| Asthma no chest X-ray | 682 | 413 (60.6) | 669 | 379 (56.7) | 689 | 368 (53.4) | 689 | 355 (51.5) |
| Asthma corticosteroid prescription documented | 682 | 472 (69.2) | 669 | 432 (64.6) | 689 | 388 (56.3) | 689 | 395 (57.3) |
| Asthma discharge instructions documented | 682 | 531 (77.9) | 669 | 533 (79.7) | 689 | 469 (68.1) | 689 | 502 (72.9) |
| Adult fracture pain assessment | 504 | 257 (51.0) | 506 | 253 (50.0) | 507 | 264 (52.1) | 507 | 268 (52.9) |
| Adult fracture analgesic or splinting | 504 | 463 (91.9) | 506 | 464 (91.7) | 507 | 468 (92.3) | 507 | 477 (94.1) |
| Adult fracture discharge instructions documented | 504 | 447 (88.7) | 506 | 453 (89.5) | 507 | 437 (86.2) | 507 | 431 (85.0) |
| Paediatric fracture pain assessment | 336 | 137 (40.8) | 328 | 157 (47.9) | 377 | 157 (41.6) | 377 | 172 (45.6) |
| Paediatric fracture analgesic or splinting | 336 | 303 (90.2) | 328 | 307 (93.6) | 377 | 335 (88.9) | 377 | 342 (90.7) |
| Paediatric fracture discharge instructions documented | 336 | 304 (90.5) | 328 | 311 (94.8) | 377 | 333 (88.3) | 377 | 341 (90.5) |
AMI, acute myocardial infarction; ASA, acetylsalicylic acid; ED, emergency department; STEMI, ST-elevated myocardial infarction.
Timeliness outcomes among study patients in fiscal years 2008 and 2010 according to improvement in ED length of stay
| Improved sites | Non-improved sites | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2008 | 2010 | 2008 | 2010 | |||||
| Timeliness outcome | N | n (%) | N | n (%) | N | n (%) | N | n (%) |
| AMI time to thrombolysis, min* | 64 | 35 (21–65)* | 7 | 110 (26–300)* | 48 | 29 (16–51)* | 24 | 38 (16–73)* |
| AMI time to PCI, min* | 58 | 77 (55–208)* | 55 | 80 (53–157)* | 70 | 146 (65–534)* | 54 | 73 (47–141)* |
| AMI reperfusion within target | 119 | 74 (62.2) | 61 | 29 (47.5) | 107 | 61 (57.0) | 76 | 44 (57.9) |
| Asthma time to corticosteroid* | 401 | 95 (46–178)* | 372 | 87 (46–172)* | 364 | 79 (40–144)* | 401 | 103 (49–172)* |
| Asthma corticosteroid within 60 min | 401 | 133 (35.4) | 372 | 127 (35.5) | 364 | 133 (38.1) | 401 | 123 (32.7) |
| Asthma time to beta-agonist* | 567 | 58 (23–130)* | 536 | 53 (22–119)* | 554 | 50 (21–106)* | 574 | 49 (19–113)* |
| Asthma beta-agonist within 60 min | 567 | 268 (52.1) | 536 | 272 (54.5) | 554 | 290 (55.3) | 574 | 298 (56.5) |
| Adult fracture time to analgesic/splinting* | 463 | 108 (56–198)* | 464 | 92 (50–149)* | 468 | 112 (61–182)* | 477 | 121 (63–219)* |
| Adult fracture analgesic/splinting within 60 min | 463 | 82 (17.7) | 464 | 107 (23.1) | 468 | 79 (16.9) | 477 | 75 (15.7) |
| Paediatric fracture time to analgesic/splinting* | 303 | 88 (26–161)* | 307 | 64 (23–126)* | 335 | 96 (43–145)* | 342 | 93 (40–152)* |
| Paediatric fracture analgesic/splinting within 60 min | 303 | 50 (16.5) | 307 | 61 (19.9) | 335 | 62 (18.5) | 342 | 63 (18.4) |
*Median (IQR).
AMI, acute myocardial infarction; ED, emergency department; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention.
Figure 1Association between improvement in hospital-level median ED LOS and improvement in other quality of care indicators. The figure depicts the rate ratio (difference-in-differences, computed as a ratio of ratios on the log scale) of better performance on specific quality indicators comparing the change in performance over the study period among hospitals that had improved median ED LOS with the change in performance among hospitals that had not improved. As shown in the figure, none of the quality indicators was associated with shift-level crowding. AMI, acute myocardial infarction; ASA, acetylsalicylic acid; ED, emergency department; LOS, length of stay; STEMI, ST-elevated myocardial infarction.
Figure 2Association between lower levels of shift-level crowding and quality of care indicators. The figure depicts the rate ratio of performance on specific quality indicators during periods of lower shift-level crowding (defined as the CTAS-specific average ED LOS of <4 h) compared with high shift-level crowding (≥8 h). As shown in the figure, performance on four of the five quality indicators reflecting timeliness was better during periods of lower shift-level crowding. None of the other indicators was associated with shift-level crowding. AMI, acute myocardial infarction; ASA, acetylsalicylic acid; CTAS, Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale; ED, emergency department; LOS, length of stay; STEMI, ST-elevated myocardial infarction.