Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine | |
Brief hospitalizations of elderly patients: a retrospective, observational study | |
Thomas Andersen Schmidt1  Søren Wistisen Rasmussen1  Sofie Strømgaard1  | |
[1] The Emergency Department, Holbæk University Hospital, Holbæk, Denmark | |
关键词: Emergency department; Inappropriate hospitalization; Old; Elderly; Length of stay; | |
Others : 804905 DOI : 10.1186/1757-7241-22-17 |
|
received in 2013-09-28, accepted in 2014-02-28, 发布年份 2014 | |
【 摘 要 】
Background
Crowded departments are a common problem in Danish hospitals, especially in departments of internal medicine, where a large proportion of the patients are elderly. We therefore chose to investigate the number and character of hospitalizations of elderly patients with a duration of less than 24 hours, as such short admissions could indicate that the patients had not been severely ill and that it might have been possible in these cases to avoid hospitalization.
Methods
Medical records were examined to determine the number of patients aged 75 or more who passed through the emergency department over a period of two months, and the proportion of those patients who were discharged after less than 24 hours. The reasons for the hospitalization, the diagnoses and the treatment given were noted.
Results
There was a total of 595 hospitalizations of patients aged 75 or above in the emergency department during the period. Twenty-four percent of the older patients were discharged after less than 24 hours. Of these, 40% were discharged from the emergency department. The most common problems leading to hospitalization were change in contact or level of consciousness, focal neurological change, red, swollen or painful leg conditions, dyspnea, suspected parenchyma surgical disease and problems with the urinary system or catheters. The most common diagnoses given at hospital were chronic cardiovascular disease, bacterial infection, symptoms deriving from bone, muscle or connective tissue, liquid or electrolyte derangement and observation for suspected stroke or transient cerebral ischemia. Eight percent of the patients required telemetry, 27% received intravenous liquids, 30% had diagnostic radiology procedures performed and 3% needed invasive procedures. Other types of treatment given included electrocardiography, laboratory examinations, oxygen supplements, urinary catheterization and medicine administered orally, subcutaneously, as an intramuscular injection or as an inhalation.
Conclusion
There appears to be a group of patients who cannot be adequately handled with the resources of the primary health care sector, yet who do not belong at the emergency department. Further studies are needed to create a suitable service for these patients, and to improve the continuity of the treatment and the cooperation between hospitals and the primary health care sector.
【 授权许可】
2014 Strømgaard et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
---|---|---|---|
20140708070653792.pdf | 246KB | download | |
Figure 2. | 68KB | Image | download |
Figure 1. | 68KB | Image | download |
【 图 表 】
Figure 1.
Figure 2.
【 参考文献 】
- [1]Pedersen EH: Demografi og vækst i Danmark. Kvartalsoversigt. Denmark: Danmarks Nationalbank; 2000. 1, s. 77-89
- [2]Stranges E, Friedman B: Potentially Preventable Hospitalization Rates Declined for Older Adults 2003-2007. Rockville, MD, USA: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; 2009. [HCUP Statistical Brief #83]
- [3]Morton C: Hazards of hospitalization of the elderly. Ann Intern Med 1993, 118:219-223.
- [4]Grabowski DC, Stewart KA, Broderick SM, Coots LA: Predictors of nursing home hospitalizations: a review of the literature. Med Care Res Rev 2008, 65(1):3-39.
- [5]Gillick MR, Serrell NA, Gillick LS: Adverse consequences of hospitalization of hospitalization in the elderly. Soc Sci Med 1982, 16:1033-1038.
- [6]Gill TM, Williams CS, Tinetti ME: The combined effect of baseline vulnerability and acute hospital events on the development of functional dependence among community-living older persons. J Gerontol Biol Med Sci 1999, 54A(7):M377-M383.
- [7]Sager MA, Franke T, Inouye SK, Landefeld CS, Morgan TM, Rudberg MA, Sebens H, Winograd CH: Functional outcomes of acute medical illness and hospitalization in older persons. Arch Intern Med 1996, 156:645-652.
- [8]Covinsky KE, Palmer RM, Fortinsky RH, Counsell SR, Stewart AL, Kresevic D, Burant CJ, Landefeld CS: Loss of independence in activities of daily living in older adults hospitalized with medical illness: increased vulnerability with age. J Am Geriatr Soc 2003, 51(4):451-458.
- [9]Ackroyd-Stolarz S, Read Guernsey J, Mackinnon NJ, Kovacs G: The association between a prolonged stay in the emergency department and adverse events in older patients admitted to a hospital: a retrospective cohort study. BMJ Quality and Safety 2011, 20:564-569.
- [10]Cherubini A, Eusebi A, Dell’Aquila G, Landi F, Gasperini B, Bacuccoli R, Menculini G, Bernabei R, Lattanzio F, Ruggiero C: Predictors of hospitalization in Italian nursing home residents: The U.L.S.S.E. Project. JAMDA 2012, 13(1):84.e5-84.e10.
- [11]Konetzka RT, Spector W, Limcango MR: Reducing hospitalizations from long –term care settings. Med Care Res Rev 2008, 65(1):40-66.
- [12]Guo B, Harstall C: Strategies to Reduce Emergency Department Overcrowding. Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research, health. Edmonton, Alberta, Canada: John Wiley & Sons; 2006. [Technology Assesment report # 38]
- [13]Daly S, Campbell DA, Cameron PA: Short stay units and observation medicine: a systematic review. Med J Aust 2003, 178(11):559-563.
- [14]Boudreaux ED, Cruz BL, Baumann BM: The use of performance improvement methods to enhance emergency department patient satisfaction in the United States: a critical review of the literature and suggestions for future research. Acad Emerg Med 2006, 13(7):795-802.
- [15]Leff B, Burton L, Mader SL, Naughton B, Burl J, Greenough WB 3rd, Guido S, Steinwachs D: Comparison of functional outcomes associated with hospital at home care and traditional acute hospital care. J Am Geriatr Soc 2009, 57:273-278.
- [16]Aimonino Ricauda N, Tibaldi V, Leff B, Scarafiotti C, Marinello R, Zanocchi M, Molaschi M: Substitutive “hospital at home” versus inpatient care for elderly patients with exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a prospective randomized, controlled trial. J Am Geriatr Soc 2008, 56:493-500.