Abstract

BackgroundEmergency Department (ED) are challenged by the increasing number of visits made by the heterogeneous population of elderly persons. This study aims to 1) compare chief complaints (triage categories) and level of priority; 2) to investigate their association with hospitalization after an ED visit; 3) to explore factors explaining the difference in hospitalization rates among community-dwelling older adults aged 65–84 vs 85+ years.MethodsAll ED visits of patients age 65 and over that occurred between 2005 and 2010 to the University of Lausanne Medical Center were analyzed. Associations of hospitalization with triage categories and level of priority using regressions were compared between the two age groups. Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition was performed to explore how much age-related differences in prevalence of priority level and triage categories contributed to predicted difference in hospitalization rates across the two age groups.ResultsAmong 39′178 ED visits, 8′812 (22.5%) occurred in 85+ patients. This group had fewer high priority and more low priority conditions than the younger group. Older patients were more frequently triaged in “Trauma” (20.9 vs 15.0%) and “Home care impossible” (10.1% vs 4.2%) categories, and were more frequently hospitalized after their ED visit (69.1% vs 58.5%). Differences in prevalence of triage categories between the two age groups explained a quarter (26%) of the total age-related difference in hospitalization rates, whereas priority level did not play a role.ConclusionsPrevalence of priority level and in triage categories differed across the two age groups but only triage categories contributed moderately to explaining the age-related difference in hospitalization rates after the ED visit. Indeed, most of this difference remained unexplained, suggesting that age itself, besides other unmeasured factors, may play a role in explaining the higher hospitalization rate in patients aged 85+ years.

Highlights

  • Emergency Department (ED) are challenged by the increasing number of visits made by the heterogeneous population of elderly persons

  • Emergency departments (EDs) impacted by this epidemiologic trend as they act as the gateway to medical care for most patients presenting with episodes of acute illness or acute exacerbations of chronic illnesses

  • This study aims to 1) to compare chief complaints and level of priority; 2) to investigate their association with hospitalization after an ED visit; 3) to explore factors explaining the difference in hospitalization rates among community-dwelling older adults aged 65–84 versus 85+ years

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Summary

Introduction

Emergency Department (ED) are challenged by the increasing number of visits made by the heterogeneous population of elderly persons. Aging of the population challenges health care systems as the number of frail older patients requiring chronic and complex care grows. From 2001 to 2009, ED visits by patients aged 65 and older increased by 25% in the United States [2]. This progression was even more pronounced among adults aged 85 years and older, reaching a 30% increase over the same period [2]. Adults aged 85 years and over have twice the rate of ED visits as compared with patients in their late 60s [5, 6]

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