Gabayan Gelareh Z, Gould Michael K, Weiss Robert E, Derose Stephen F, Chiu Vicki Y, Sarkisian Catherine A
Department of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA.
Department of Medicine, Greater Los Angeles Veterans Affairs Healthcare System, Los Angeles, CA.
Acad Emerg Med. 2017 Jul;24(7):846-854. doi: 10.1111/acem.13194.
Vital signs are critical markers of illness severity in the emergency department (ED). Providers need to understand the abnormal vital signs in older adults that are problematic. We hypothesized that in patients age > 65 years discharged from the ED, there are abnormal vital signs that are associated with an admission to an inpatient bed within 7 days of discharge.
We conducted a retrospective cohort study using data from a regional integrated health system of members age > 65 years during the years 2009 to 2010. We used univariate contingency tables to assess the relationship between hospital admission within 7 days of discharge and vital sign (including systolic blood pressure [sBP], heart rate [HR], body temperature, and pulse oximetry [SpO ] values measured closest to discharge) using standard thresholds for abnormal and thresholds derived from the study data.
Of 104,025 ED discharges, 4,638 (4.5%) were followed by inpatient admission within 7 days. Vital signs had a greater odds of admission beyond a single cutoff. The vital signs with at least twice the odds of admission were sBP < 97 mm Hg (odds ratio [OR] = 2.02, 95% CI = 1.57-2.60), HR > 101 beats/min (OR = 2.00 95% CI = 1.75-2.29), body temperature > 37.3°C (OR = 2.14, 95% CI = 1.90-2.41), and pulse oximetry < 92 SpO (OR = 2.04, 95% CI = 1.55-2.68). Patients with two vital sign abnormalities per the analysis had the highest odds of admission. A majority of patients discharged with abnormal vital signs per the analysis were not admitted within 7 days of ED discharge.
While we found a majority of patients discharged with abnormal vital signs as defined by the analysis, not to be admitted after discharge, we identified vital signs associated with at least twice the odds of admission.
生命体征是急诊科疾病严重程度的关键指标。医护人员需要了解老年患者中存在问题的异常生命体征。我们假设,在年龄大于65岁且从急诊科出院的患者中,存在与出院后7天内入住住院病床相关的异常生命体征。
我们进行了一项回顾性队列研究,使用了2009年至2010年期间一个地区综合卫生系统中年龄大于65岁成员的数据。我们使用单变量列联表,采用异常的标准阈值和从研究数据得出的阈值,评估出院后7天内住院与生命体征(包括最接近出院时测量的收缩压[sBP]、心率[HR]、体温和脉搏血氧饱和度[SpO]值)之间的关系。
在104,025例急诊科出院患者中,4,638例(4.5%)在7天内随后入住了住院病房。生命体征在超过单一临界值时入院的几率更高。入院几率至少为两倍的生命体征为:收缩压<97 mmHg(优势比[OR]=2.02,95%置信区间[CI]=1.57 - 2.60)、心率>101次/分钟(OR = 2.00,95% CI = 1.75 - 2.29)、体温>37.3°C(OR = 2.14,95% CI = 1.90 - 2.41)以及脉搏血氧饱和度<92% SpO(OR = 2.04,95% CI = 1.55 - 2.68)。根据分析,有两项生命体征异常的患者入院几率最高。分析显示,大多数生命体征异常出院的患者在急诊科出院后7天内未被收治。
虽然我们发现分析定义的大多数生命体征异常出院患者出院后未被收治,但我们确定了入院几率至少为两倍的生命体征。