Daud-Gallotti Renata, Dutilh Novaes Hillegonda Maria, Lorenzi Maria Cecília, Eluf-Neto José, Namie Okamura Mirna, Tadeu Velasco Irineu
Department of Medical Emergency Medicine, School of Medicine, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
Eur J Emerg Med. 2005 Apr;12(2):63-71. doi: 10.1097/00063110-200504000-00005.
To identify the occurrence of adverse events in stroke patients presenting to the emergency department of a tertiary university facility, and to disclose the categories of adverse events associated with death.
This matched case-control study enrolled 468 patients admitted with stroke to the emergency department from March 1996 to September 1999. The cases comprised 234 consecutive deaths and the controls 234 discharged patients, matched for primary diagnosis and admission period. Adverse events, detected by chart review, were classified according to the degree of severity, immediate causes, and professional category. The association with death was analysed by conditional logistic regression.
Adverse events totaled 1218 and occurred in 295 patients: 932 events (76.5%) in 170 cases and 286 (23.5%) in 125 controls. Major adverse events equaled 54.1% of all events (659 episodes): 538 events in 143 cases and 121 in 65 controls. Diagnostic or therapeutic procedures and nursing activities accounted for 55.2% of events. Nursing (38.4%) and medical (31%) adverse events represented the most common related professional categories. A significant association with death was found for major adverse events, medical adverse events, and nosocomial infections, with adjusted odds ratio estimates of 3.74 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.64-8.54], 3.71 (95% CI 1.61-8.53), and 3.22 (95% CI 1.21-8.59), respectively.
Adverse events, mostly severe, predominated among deceased patients, resulting mainly from diagnostic or therapeutic procedures and nursing activities. In spite of limitations concerning the observational retrospective nature of this study, we found that severe adverse events, medical adverse events, and nosocomial infections were significantly associated with death in stroke patients.
确定在一所三级大学附属医院急诊科就诊的卒中患者中不良事件的发生率,并揭示与死亡相关的不良事件类别。
这项匹配病例对照研究纳入了1996年3月至1999年9月期间因卒中入住急诊科的468例患者。病例组包括234例连续死亡患者,对照组为234例出院患者,两组在初步诊断和入院时间上相匹配。通过病历审查检测到的不良事件,根据严重程度、直接原因和专业类别进行分类。采用条件逻辑回归分析与死亡的关联。
共发生1218起不良事件,涉及295例患者:170例病例中发生932起事件(76.5%),125例对照中发生286起事件(23.5%)。主要不良事件占所有事件的54.1%(659起):143例病例中发生538起事件,65例对照中发生121起事件。诊断或治疗程序及护理活动占事件的55.2%。护理(38.4%)和医疗(31%)不良事件是最常见的相关专业类别。发现主要不良事件、医疗不良事件和医院感染与死亡存在显著关联,调整后的比值比估计分别为3.74[95%置信区间(CI)1.64 - 8.54]、3.71(95%CI 1.61 - 8.53)和3.22(95%CI 1.21 - 8.59)。
不良事件在死亡患者中占主导地位,大多较为严重,主要源于诊断或治疗程序及护理活动。尽管本研究具有观察性回顾性质存在局限性,但我们发现严重不良事件、医疗不良事件和医院感染与卒中患者的死亡显著相关。