Geriatric Screening, Triage Urgency, and 30‐Day Mortality in Older Emergency Department Patients
BACKGROUND Urgency triage in the emergency department (ED) is important for early identification of potentially lethal conditions and extensive resource utilization. However, in older patients, urgency triage systems could be improved by taking geriatric vulnerability into account. We investigated t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS) 2020-08, Vol.68 (8), p.1755-1762 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | BACKGROUND
Urgency triage in the emergency department (ED) is important for early identification of potentially lethal conditions and extensive resource utilization. However, in older patients, urgency triage systems could be improved by taking geriatric vulnerability into account. We investigated the association of geriatric vulnerability screening in addition to triage urgency levels with 30‐day mortality in older ED patients.
DESIGN
Secondary analysis of the observational multicenter Acutely Presenting Older Patient (APOP) study.
SETTING
EDs within four Dutch hospitals.
PARTICIPANTS
Consecutive patients, aged 70 years or older, who were prospectively included.
MEASUREMENTS
Patients were triaged using the Manchester Triage System (MTS). In addition, the APOP screener was used as a geriatric screening tool. The primary outcome was 30‐day mortality. Comparison was made between mortality within the geriatric high‐ and low‐risk screened patients in every urgency triage category. We calculated the difference in explained variance of mortality by adding the geriatric screener (APOP) to triage urgency (MTS) by calculating Nagelkerke R2.
RESULTS
We included 2,608 patients with a median age of 79 (interquartile range = 74‐84) years, of whom 521 (20.0%) patients were categorized as high risk according to geriatric screening. Patients were triaged on urgency as standard (27.2%), urgent (58.5%), and very urgent (14.3%). In total, 132 (5.1%) patients were deceased within a period of 30 days. Within every urgency triage category, 30‐day mortality was threefold higher in geriatric high‐risk compared to low‐risk patients (overall = 11.7% vs 3.4%; P |
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ISSN: | 0002-8614 1532-5415 |
DOI: | 10.1111/jgs.16427 |