Abstract

BackgroundDelays in finding inpatient beds and transferring patients lead to overcrowding in the Emergency Department (ED). Local problemThe emergency nurse coordinator role was implemented in the general or adult ED to optimize patient flow, but few studies are available for pediatric hospitals. ObjectiveThe aim was to assess the impact of a pediatric emergency nurse coordinator and an ED porter on the ED length of stay for inpatients. MethodsA retrospective before-after study was conducted in a pediatric hospital. ED inpatient length of stay was compared between December 2015 and December 2016. The probability to get an ED length of stay below the median was modeled in multivariate analysis. InterventionA pediatric emergency nurse coordinator and ED porter were implemented in 2016. Results1086 hospitalized children were included. The ED length of stay was significantly longer in 2016 (median: 5.5 h, IQR: 3 h and 49 min, 7 h and 22 min) than in 2015 (median: 4.8 h, IQR: 3 h and 19 min, 6 h and 18 min). The year 2015 (OR 1.56, 95% CI [1.1, 2.2]), the absence of imaging, the absence of aerosol and IV drug administration, the number of hospitalizations on the day below the median, type of hospitalization unit, and the age of children younger than 1 years old were associated with a shorter ED length of stay (below the median) in the multivariate analysis. ConclusionOur study did not confirm the advantages of these two professionals in our pediatric ED.

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