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Patient physiological status at the emergency department-ward interface and emergency calls for clinical deterioration during early hospital admission

journal contribution
posted on 2016-06-01, 00:00 authored by Julie ConsidineJulie Considine, D Jones, D Pilcher, Judy CurreyJudy Currey
Aims: To examine the relationship between physiological status at the emergency department-ward interface and emergency calls (medical emergency team or cardiac arrest team activation) during the first 72hours of hospital admission. Background: Ward adverse events are related to abnormal physiology in emergency department however the relationship between physiology at the emergency department-ward interface and ward adverse events is unknown. Design: Descriptive and exploratory design. Methods: The study involved 1980 patients at three hospitals in Melbourne Australia: i) 660 randomly selected adults admitted via the emergency department to medical or surgical wards during 2012 and who had an emergency call; and ii) 1320 adults without emergency calls matched for gender, triage category, usual residence, admitting unit and age. Results/findings: The median age was 78years and 488% were males. The median time to the first emergency call was 188hours and ≥1 abnormal parameters were documented in 349% of patients during the last hour of ED care and 471% of patients during first hour of ward care. Emergency calls were significantly more common in patients with heart rate and conscious state abnormalities during the last hour of emergency care and abnormal oxygen saturation, heart rate or respiratory rate during the first hour of ward care. Medical emergency team afferent limb failure occurred in 553% patients with medical emergency team activation criteria during first hour of ward care. Conclusion: The use of physiological status at the emergency department-ward interface to guide care planning and reasons for and outcomes of medical emergency team afferent limb failure are important areas for future research.

History

Journal

Journal of Advanced Nursing

Volume

72

Issue

6

Pagination

1287 - 1300

ISSN

0309-2402

eISSN

1365-2648

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, John Wiley & Sons