Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3223024 The American Journal of Emergency Medicine 2016 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundEmergency Department (ED) service evaluations are typically based on surveys of discharged patients. Physicians/administrators benefit from data that quantifies system-based factors that adversely impact the experience of those who represent the survey cohort.ObjectiveWhile investigators have established that admitted patient boarding impacts overall ED throughput times, we sought to specifically quantify the relationship between throughput times for patients admitted (EDLOS) versus discharged home from the ED (DCLOS).MethodsWe performed a prospective analysis of consecutive patient encounters at an inner-city ED. Variables collected: median daily DCLOS for ED patients, ED daily census, left without being seen (LWBS), median door to doctor, median room to doctor, and daily number admitted. Admitted patients divided into 2 groups based on daily median EDLOS for admits (< 6 hours, ≥ 6 hours). Continuous variables analyzed by t-tests. Multivariate regression utilized to identify independent effects of the co-variants on median daily DCLOS.ResultsWe analyzed 24,127 patient visits. ED patient DCLOS was longer for patients seen on days with prolonged EDLOS (193.7 minutes, 95%CI 186.7–200.7 vs. 152.8, 144.9–160.5, P< .0001). Variables that were associated with increased daily median EDLOS for admits included: daily admits (P= 0.01), room to doctor time (P< .01), number of patients that left without being seen (P< .01). When controlling for the covariate daily census, differences in DCLOS remained significant for the ≥ 6 hours group (189.4 minutes, 95%CI 184.1–194.7 vs. 164.8, 155.7–173.9 (P< .0001).ConclusionProlonged ED stays for admitted patients were associated with prolonged throughput times for patients discharged home from the ED.

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