Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Community Medicine, Primary Care and Emergency Medicine, Geneva University Hospitals and Geneva University, Faculty of Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland.
Division of Primary Care Medicine, Department of Community Medicine, Primary Care and Emergency Medicine, Geneva University Hospitals and Geneva University, Faculty of Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland.
Intern Emerg Med. 2019 Apr;14(3):467-473. doi: 10.1007/s11739-018-2007-7. Epub 2018 Dec 14.
Acute ethanol intoxication (AEI) is frequent in emergency departments (EDs). These patients are at risk of mistriage, and to leave the ED without being seen. This study's objective was to describe the process and performance of triage and trajectory for patients with suspected AEI. Retrospective, observational study on adults admitted with a suspected AEI within 1 year at the ED of an urban teaching hospital. Data on the triage process, patients' characteristics, and their ED stay were extracted from electronic patient records. Predictors for leaving without being seen were identified using logistic regression analyzes. Of 60,488 ED patients within 1 year, 776 (1.3%) were triaged with suspected AEI. This population was young (mean age 38), primarily male (64%), and professionally inactive (56%). A large proportion were admitted on weekends (45%), at night (46%), and arrived by ambulance (85%). The recommendations of our triage scale were entirely respected in a minority of cases. In 22.7% of triage situations, a triage reason other than "alcohol abuse/intoxication" (such as suicidal ideation, head trauma or other substance abuse) should have been selected. Nearly, half of the patients (49%) left without being seen (LWBS). This risk was especially high amongst men (OR 1.56, 95% CI 1.12-2.19), younger patients (< 26 years of age; OR 1.97, 95% CI 1.16-3.35), night-time admissions (OR 1.97, 95% CI 1.16-3.35), and patients assigned a lower emergency level (OR 2.32, 95% CI 1.58-3.42). Despite a standardized triage protocol, patients admitted with suspected AEI are at risk of poor assessment, and of not receiving optimal care.
急性乙醇中毒(AEI)在急诊科(ED)很常见。这些患者有分诊错误的风险,并且有可能未经诊治就离开 ED。本研究的目的是描述疑似 AEI 患者的分诊过程和轨迹。这是一项在城市教学医院急诊科 1 年内收治的疑似 AEI 成人患者的回顾性观察性研究。从电子病历中提取分诊过程、患者特征及其 ED 停留时间的数据。使用逻辑回归分析确定未被观察到的离开的预测因素。在 1 年内的 60488 名 ED 患者中,有 776 名(1.3%)被分诊为疑似 AEI。该人群年龄较小(平均年龄 38 岁),主要为男性(64%),无职业(56%)。很大一部分人在周末(45%)、夜间(46%)和乘坐救护车(85%)到达。我们分诊量表的建议在少数情况下得到了完全遵守。在 22.7%的分诊情况下,应该选择除“酒精滥用/中毒”以外的分诊原因(如自杀意念、头部创伤或其他物质滥用)。将近一半的患者(49%)未经观察就离开了(LWBS)。这种风险在男性中尤其高(OR 1.56,95%CI 1.12-2.19),年轻患者(<26 岁;OR 1.97,95%CI 1.16-3.35),夜间入院(OR 1.97,95%CI 1.16-3.35),以及被分配到较低紧急级别的患者(OR 2.32,95%CI 1.58-3.42)。尽管有标准化的分诊方案,但因疑似 AEI 而入院的患者仍存在评估不佳和未接受最佳治疗的风险。