| Literature DB >> 27658706 |
Mathias C Blom1, Karin Erwander2, Lars Gustafsson3, Mona Landin-Olsson2, Fredrik Jonsson4, Kjell Ivarsson2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Emergency department (ED) overcrowding is frequently described in terms of input- throughput and output. In order to reduce ED input, a concept called primary triage has been introduced in several Swedish EDs. In short, primary triage means that a nurse separately evaluates patients who present in the Emergency Department (ED) and either refers them to primary care or discharges them home, if their complaints are perceived as being of low acuity. The aim of the present study is to elucidate whether high levels of in-hospital bed occupancy are associated with decreased permeability in primary triage. The appropriateness of discharges from primary triage is assessed by 72-h revisits to the ED.Entities:
Keywords: Bed occupancy; Emergency Department revisits; Emergency medicine; Triage
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27658706 PMCID: PMC5034663 DOI: 10.1186/s12873-016-0102-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Criteria applied to direct patients to primary triage (used by secretary)
| All the criteria below need to be fulfilled before a patient can be referred to primary triage |
| Age >1 and < 70 |
| Fully awake, without dyspnoea, pallor or sweatiness |
| Self-ambulating without problems |
| 5 or fewer patients waiting for primary triage |
| Each of the following groups of patients is directly admitted to the ED after registration |
| Dyspnoea |
| Chest pain |
| Abdominal pain |
| Patients with known cancer |
| Foreign body |
| Known atrial fibrillation (where the patient suspects relapse) |
| Chronic bowel disease |
| Problems related to nasogastric tubes, catheters and plasters |
| Scrotal pain |
| Urinary obstruction or haematuria |
| Revisits (planned and unplanned) |
Descriptive statistics across outcomes
| Variable | ED admission | 72 h revisits | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Yes | No | Yes | ||
| Sex | Female | 8232 (45.8 %) | 9745 (54.2 %) | 7541 (91.6 %) | 691 (8.4 %) |
| Male | 9068 (47.3 %) | 10084 (52.7 %) | 8230 (90.8 %) | 838 (9.2 %) | |
| Age [Years] | 0–1 | 82 (46.3 %) | 95 (53.7 %) | 79 (96 %) | 3 (4 %) |
| 1–18 | 3028 (46.1 %) | 3545 (53.9 %) | 2797 (92.4 %) | 231 (7.6 %) | |
| 18–40 | 8278 (52.5 %) | 7478 (47.5 %) | 7590 (91.7 %) | 688 (8.3 %) | |
| 40–70 | 5071 (42.1 %) | 6972 (57.9 %) | 4559 (89.9 %) | 512 (10.1 %) | |
| >70 | 841 (32.6 %) | 1739 (67.4 %) | 746 (88.7 %) | 95 (11.3 %) | |
| Year | 2011 | 8942 (44.8 %) | 11032 (55.2 %) | 8098 (90.6 %) | 844 (9.4 %) |
| 2012 | 8358 (48.7 %) | 8797 (51.3 %) | 7673 (91.8 %) | 685 (8.2 %) | |
| Inflow >75th percentile | High inflow p-triage | 5786 (45.1 %) | 7037 (54.9 %) | 5234 (90.5 %) | 552 (9.5 %) |
| High inflow ED | 3935 (44.4 %) | 4935 (55.6 %) | 3598 (91.4 %) | 337 (8.6 %) | |
| Shift | 8 am-4 pm | 6216 (45.3 %) | 7500 (54.7 %) | 5753 (92.6 %) | 463 (7.4 %) |
| 4 pm-0 am | 8502 (49.0 %) | 8859 (51.0 %) | 7784 (91.6 %) | 718 (8.4 %) | |
| 0 am-8 am | 2582 (42.7 %) | 3470 (57.3 %) | 2234 (86.5 %) | 348 (13.5 %) | |
| Time of week | Mon | 2538 (47.5 %) | 2810 (52.5 %) | 2325 (91.6 %) | 213 (8.4 %) |
| Tue-Fri | 8510 (46.0 %) | 9972 (54.0 %) | 7789 (91.5 %) | 721 (8.5 %) | |
| Weekend | 6252 (47.0 %) | 7047 (53.0 %) | 5657 (90.5 %) | 595 (9.5 %) | |
| Total | 17300 (46.6 %) | 19829 (53.4 %) | 15771 (91.2 %) | 1529 (8.8 %) | |
Fig. 1Adjusted analysis. Odds-ratio for ED admission, compared to occupancy <95 % (measured at presentation)
Fig. 2Adjusted analysis. Odds-ratio for ED admission, compared to occupancy <95 % (3 h timelag)
Fig. 3Adjusted analysis. Odds-ratio for 72-h revisit, compared to occupancy <95 % (measured at presentation)
Fig. 4Adjusted analysis. Odds-ratio for 72-h revisit, compared to occupancy <95 % (3 h timelag)