Abstract

BackgroundDisposition decisions are critical to the functioning of Emergency Departments. The objectives of the present study were to derive and internally validate a prediction model for inpatient admission from the Emergency Department to assist with triage, patient flow and clinical decision making.MethodsThis was a retrospective analysis of State-wide Emergency Department data in New South Wales, Australia. Adult patients (age ≥ 16 years) were included if they presented to a Level five or six (tertiary level) Emergency Department in New South Wales, Australia between 2013 and 2014. The outcome of interest was in-patient admission from the Emergency Department. This included all admissions to short stay and medical assessment units and being transferred out to another hospital. Analyses were performed using logistic regression. Discrimination was assessed using area under curve and derived risk scores were plotted to assess calibration.Results1,721,294 presentations from twenty three Level five or six hospitals were analysed. Of these 49.38% were male and the mean (sd) age was 49.85 years (22.13). Level 6 hospitals accounted for 47.70% of cases and 40.74% of cases were classified as an in-patient admission based on their mode of separation. The final multivariable model including age, arrival by ambulance, triage category, previous admission and presenting problem had an AUC of 0.82 (95% CI 0.81, 0.82).ConclusionBy deriving and internally validating a risk score model to predict the need for in-patient admission based on basic demographic and triage characteristics, patient flow in ED, clinical decision making and overall quality of care may be improved. Further studies are now required to establish clinical effectiveness of this risk score model.

Highlights

  • Disposition decisions are critical to the functioning of Emergency Departments

  • It has been shown that most experienced Emergency Departments (ED) clinicians use clinical judgement to make disposition decisions, in ED, these are often made in the context of various time pressures, limited clinical information and ED overcrowding which can lead to clinical errors [1, 2]

  • 26,915 had missing presenting problems, 24,564 (1.41%) had presenting problems that were uncodeable and 777 cases did not wait for triage, leaving 1,721,294 presentations from twenty three level 5 or 6 hospitals

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Summary

Introduction

The objectives of the present study were to derive and internally validate a prediction model for inpatient admission from the Emergency Department to assist with triage, patient flow and clinical decision making. One of the most important aspects of treating patients in Emergency Departments (ED) is deciding whether a patient is safe for discharge or requires in-patient admission for further treatment and stabilisation [1]. These are termed disposition decisions and they involve the complex interaction of clinical factors such as diagnoses, severity and response to treatment, as well as social and clinician factors. A recent study of four hospitals, including two Veteran’s Affairs hospitals in the US developed a prediction model for admission using urgency categories, presenting problem categories and age, with moderately high accuracy (Area Under Receiver Operator Characteristic Curve between 0.80 to 0.89) [6]

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