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Pathways to the emergency department - a national, cross-sectional study in Sweden

Henricson, Joakim ; Ekelund, Ulf LU orcid ; Hartman, Jens ; Ziegler, Bruno ; Kurland, Lisa and Björk Wilhelms, Daniel (2022) In BMC Emergency Medicine 22(1).
Abstract

Background: Swedish Emergency Departments (EDs) see 2.6 million visits annually. Sweden has a strong tradition of health care databases, but information on patients’ pathways to the ED is not documented in any registry. The aim of this study was to provide a national overview of pathways, degree of medical acuteness according to triage, chief complaints, and hospital admission rates for adult patients (≥18 years) visiting Swedish EDs during 24 h. Methods: A national cross-sectional study including all patients at 43 of Sweden’s 72 EDs during 24 h on April 25th, 2018. Pathway to the ED, medical acuteness at triage, admission and basic demographics were registered by dedicated assessors present at every ED for the duration of the study.... (More)

Background: Swedish Emergency Departments (EDs) see 2.6 million visits annually. Sweden has a strong tradition of health care databases, but information on patients’ pathways to the ED is not documented in any registry. The aim of this study was to provide a national overview of pathways, degree of medical acuteness according to triage, chief complaints, and hospital admission rates for adult patients (≥18 years) visiting Swedish EDs during 24 h. Methods: A national cross-sectional study including all patients at 43 of Sweden’s 72 EDs during 24 h on April 25th, 2018. Pathway to the ED, medical acuteness at triage, admission and basic demographics were registered by dedicated assessors present at every ED for the duration of the study. Descriptive data are reported. Results: A total of 3875 adult patients (median age 59; range 18 to 107; 50% men) were included in the study. Complete data for pathway to the ED was reported for 3693 patients (98%). The most common pathway was self-referred walk-in (n = 1310; 34%), followed by ambulance (n = 920; 24%), referral from a general practitioner (n = 497; 1 3%), and telephone referral by the national medical helpline “1177” (n = 409; 10%). In patients 18 to 64 years, self-referred walk-in was most common, whereas transport by ambulance dominated in patients > 64 years. Of the 3365 patients who received a medical acuteness level at triage, 4% were classified as Red (Immediate), 18% as Orange (very urgent), 47% as Yellow (Urgent), 26% as Green (Standard), and 5% as Blue (Non-Urgent). Abdominal or chest pain were the most common chief complaints representing approximately 1/3 of all presentations. Overall, the admission rate was 27%. Arrival by ambulance was associated with the highest rate of admission (53%), whereas walk-in patients and telephone referrals were less often admitted. Conclusion: Self-referred walk-in was the overall most common pathway followed by ambulance. Patients arriving by ambulance were often elderly, critically ill and often admitted to in-patient care, whereas arrival by self-referred walk-in was more common in younger patients.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
After hours care, Delivery of health care, Demography, Emergency service, Hospital, Sweden, Triage
in
BMC Emergency Medicine
volume
22
issue
1
article number
58
publisher
BioMed Central (BMC)
external identifiers
  • scopus:85127933549
  • pmid:35392826
ISSN
1471-227X
DOI
10.1186/s12873-022-00619-3
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
99462d81-dd54-4109-bfe4-b755c28d60cc
date added to LUP
2022-06-14 12:11:41
date last changed
2024-06-13 07:27:20
@article{99462d81-dd54-4109-bfe4-b755c28d60cc,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background: Swedish Emergency Departments (EDs) see 2.6 million visits annually. Sweden has a strong tradition of health care databases, but information on patients’ pathways to the ED is not documented in any registry. The aim of this study was to provide a national overview of pathways, degree of medical acuteness according to triage, chief complaints, and hospital admission rates for adult patients (≥18 years) visiting Swedish EDs during 24 h. Methods: A national cross-sectional study including all patients at 43 of Sweden’s 72 EDs during 24 h on April 25th, 2018. Pathway to the ED, medical acuteness at triage, admission and basic demographics were registered by dedicated assessors present at every ED for the duration of the study. Descriptive data are reported. Results: A total of 3875 adult patients (median age 59; range 18 to 107; 50% men) were included in the study. Complete data for pathway to the ED was reported for 3693 patients (98%). The most common pathway was self-referred walk-in (n = 1310; 34%), followed by ambulance (n = 920; 24%), referral from a general practitioner (n = 497; 1 3%), and telephone referral by the national medical helpline “1177” (n = 409; 10%). In patients 18 to 64 years, self-referred walk-in was most common, whereas transport by ambulance dominated in patients &gt; 64 years. Of the 3365 patients who received a medical acuteness level at triage, 4% were classified as Red (Immediate), 18% as Orange (very urgent), 47% as Yellow (Urgent), 26% as Green (Standard), and 5% as Blue (Non-Urgent). Abdominal or chest pain were the most common chief complaints representing approximately 1/3 of all presentations. Overall, the admission rate was 27%. Arrival by ambulance was associated with the highest rate of admission (53%), whereas walk-in patients and telephone referrals were less often admitted. Conclusion: Self-referred walk-in was the overall most common pathway followed by ambulance. Patients arriving by ambulance were often elderly, critically ill and often admitted to in-patient care, whereas arrival by self-referred walk-in was more common in younger patients.</p>}},
  author       = {{Henricson, Joakim and Ekelund, Ulf and Hartman, Jens and Ziegler, Bruno and Kurland, Lisa and Björk Wilhelms, Daniel}},
  issn         = {{1471-227X}},
  keywords     = {{After hours care; Delivery of health care; Demography; Emergency service; Hospital; Sweden; Triage}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{BioMed Central (BMC)}},
  series       = {{BMC Emergency Medicine}},
  title        = {{Pathways to the emergency department - a national, cross-sectional study in Sweden}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12873-022-00619-3}},
  doi          = {{10.1186/s12873-022-00619-3}},
  volume       = {{22}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}