Staib Andrew, Sullivan Clair, Griffin Bronwyn, Bell Anthony, Scott Ian
Princess Alexandra Hospital, Metro South Health, 199 Ipswich Road, Woolloongabba, Qld 4102, Australia. Email:.
Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Metro North Health, Bowen Bridge Road, Herston, Qld 4129, Australia. Email.
Aust Health Rev. 2016 Jun;40(3):319-323. doi: 10.1071/AH15071.
Objective The aim of the present study was to provide a summary of a systematic review of literature reporting benefits and limitations of implementing National Emergency Access Target (NEAT), a target stipulating that a certain proportion of patients presenting to hospital emergency departments are admitted or discharged within 4h of presentation. Methods A systematic review of published literature using specific search terms, snowballing techniques applied to retrieved references and Google searches was performed. Results are presented as a narrative synthesis given the heterogeneity of included studies. Results Benefits of a time-based target for emergency care are improved timeliness of emergency care and reduced in-hospital mortality for emergency admissions to hospital. Limitations centre on using a process measure (time) alone devoid of any monitoring of patient outcomes, the threshold nature of a time target and the fact that currently NEAT combines the measurement of clinical management of two very different patient cohorts seeking emergency care: less acute patients discharged home and more acute patients admitted to hospital. Conclusions Time-based access targets for emergency presentations are associated with significant improvements in in-hospital mortality for emergency admissions. However, other patient-important outcomes are deserving of attention, choice of targets needs to be validated by empirical evidence of patient benefit and single targets need to be partitioned into separate targets pertaining to admitted and discharged patients. What is known about the topic? Time targets for emergency care originated in the UK. The introduction of NEAT in Australia has been controversial. NEAT directs that a certain proportion of patients will be admitted or discharged from an emergency department (ED) within 4h. Recent dissolution of the Australian National Partnership Agreement (which provided hospitals with financial incentives for achieving NEAT compliance) has prompted a re-examination of the 4-h rule, the evidence underpinning its introduction and its benefits and risks to patients What does this paper add? This paper is executive summary of key findings from a systematic literature review on the benefits and limitations of NEAT (the 4-h rule) commissioned by the Queensland Clinical Senate to inform future policy and targets. What are the implications for practitioners? There is evidence that a time-based target has been associated with a reduction in in-hospital mortality for emergency admissions to Australian hospitals. Concerns remain regarding a time-based target alone being used to drive redesign efforts at improving access to emergency care. A time-based target should be coupled with close monitoring of patient outcomes of emergency care. Target thresholds need to be evidence based and separate targets should be reported for admitted, discharged and all patients presenting to the ED.
目的 本研究旨在总结一项系统文献综述,该综述报告了实施国家紧急就诊目标(NEAT)的益处和局限性。NEAT是一项规定一定比例到医院急诊科就诊的患者在就诊后4小时内入院或出院的目标。方法 使用特定检索词对已发表文献进行系统综述,对检索到的参考文献应用滚雪球技术并进行谷歌搜索。鉴于纳入研究的异质性,结果以叙述性综合形式呈现。结果 急诊护理基于时间的目标的益处包括提高急诊护理的及时性以及降低急诊入院患者的院内死亡率。局限性集中在仅使用一个过程指标(时间)而未对患者结局进行任何监测、时间目标的阈值性质以及目前NEAT将寻求急诊护理的两个非常不同的患者群体(出院回家的病情较轻患者和入院的病情较重患者)的临床管理测量结合在一起这一事实。结论 急诊就诊基于时间的目标与急诊入院患者的院内死亡率显著改善相关。然而,其他对患者重要的结局值得关注,目标的选择需要通过患者受益的实证证据来验证,并且单一目标需要划分为与入院患者和出院患者相关的单独目标。关于该主题已知的信息有哪些?急诊护理的时间目标起源于英国。澳大利亚引入NEAT一直存在争议。NEAT规定一定比例的患者将在4小时内从急诊科入院或出院。澳大利亚国家合作协议(该协议为医院实现NEAT合规提供财政激励)最近的解除促使重新审视4小时规则、其引入的证据以及对患者的益处和风险。本文补充了什么内容?本文是昆士兰临床参议院委托进行的关于NEAT(4小时规则)益处和局限性的系统文献综述关键发现的执行摘要,以指导未来的政策和目标。对从业者有何影响?有证据表明基于时间的目标与澳大利亚医院急诊入院患者的院内死亡率降低相关。对于仅使用基于时间的目标来推动改善急诊护理可及性的重新设计努力仍存在担忧。基于时间的目标应与对急诊护理患者结局的密切监测相结合。目标阈值需要有证据支持,并且应分别报告入院患者、出院患者以及所有到急诊科就诊患者的目标。