Abstract

To establish the incidence of death after admission via the ED for each of the five categories of the Australasian Triage Scale in three New South Wales base hospitals, and to compare this with published data from an adult tertiary referral hospital in Victoria. To examine the causes of death in each category. Information was collected from databases established as part of quality assurance projects at three New South Wales rural base hospitals from 1 January 2000 to 31 December 2000. Overall mortality rates per ED presentation and per ED admission were significantly lower than for similar data from an adult tertiary referral hospital. There were significant differences in mortality per ED presentation for categories 2, 3 and 4 and significant differences in mortality per admission for Australasian Triage Scale categories 2 and 3. The commonest causes of death were acute cardiac/respiratory and malignancy related conditions. Triage category 3 had both the highest number of total admissions and the highest number of deaths post admission. This finding differs from published data from an adult tertiary referral hospital where category 4 represented the largest number of admissions and of in-hospital deaths following admission. This study has established the mortality rates per ED presentation and admission for each of the five categories of the Australasian Triage Scale in three New South Wales rural base hospitals. Significant differences were found between these rates and the published rates for an adult tertiary referral hospital.

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