Taghizadeh Niloofar, Bakal Jeffrey, McLane Patrick, Vigna Marisa, Vigna Carina, McRae Andrew D, Dowling Shawn, Holroyd Brian R, Lang Eddy
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada.
Acute Care Alberta, Alberta, Canada.
CJEM. 2025 Jul 25. doi: 10.1007/s43678-025-00964-9.
ED wait times have been linked to adverse patient outcomes, including increased mortality. We sought to assess the consequences of ED wait times on patient outcomes.
We conducted a cohort study using administrative data from the 14 Alberta highest-volume adult EDs (2017-2022). The relationships between different components of ED wait times and patient short-term all-cause mortality (primary outcome:7-day mortality, and secondary outcome: 30-day mortality) were assessed using Multi-level logistic regression with adjustment for age, gender, the Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS), Deprivation Index, Charlson Comorbidity Index, disposition status, hospital EDs, and visit date.
Among 1,358,935 unique adult patient ED visits, 22,692 (1.7%) deaths occurred within 7 days, and 47,441 (3.5%) occurred within 30 days after leaving the EDs. Among the entire cohort, there were no associations between prolonged total length of stay, boarding time or time from arrival to physician initial assessment, and an increased risk of the primary outcome. However, in subgroup analyses, among discharged patients, total length of stay of more than 6 hours was associated with an increased risk of 7-day mortality, and demonstrated a dose-response association with an increased risk of 30-day mortality [odds ratio (OR), 95% confidence interval (CI), (reference<6 hrs.): 1.3 (1.2-1.5) at 6-10 h, 1.8 (1.6-2.0), at 10-19 h, and 2.2 (1.8-2.7) at ≥ 19 h].
We did not observe an association between ED wait times and 7-day mortality across the overall patient population. Future work should identify specific patient groups that may be at risk of harm from ED wait times to tailor ED crowding and risk mitigation strategies to reduce adverse outcomes among the most at-risk patients.
急诊室等待时间与不良患者结局相关,包括死亡率增加。我们试图评估急诊室等待时间对患者结局的影响。
我们使用来自艾伯塔省14家成人急诊量最高的医院(2017 - 2022年)的管理数据进行了一项队列研究。使用多水平逻辑回归评估急诊室等待时间的不同组成部分与患者短期全因死亡率(主要结局:7天死亡率,次要结局:30天死亡率)之间的关系,并对年龄、性别、加拿大分诊和 acuity 量表(CTAS)、贫困指数、Charlson 合并症指数、处置状态、医院急诊室和就诊日期进行调整。
在1358935例独特的成人患者急诊就诊中,22692例(1.7%)在7天内死亡,47441例(3.5%)在离开急诊室后30天内死亡。在整个队列中,住院总时长延长、待诊时间或从到达至医生初次评估的时间与主要结局风险增加之间无关联。然而,在亚组分析中,出院患者中,住院总时长超过6小时与7天死亡率风险增加相关,并与30天死亡率风险增加呈现剂量反应关系【优势比(OR),95%置信区间(CI),(参考<6小时):6 - 10小时时为1.3(1.2 - 1.5),10 - 19小时时为1.8(1.6 - 2.0),≥19小时时为2.2(1.8 - 2.7)】。
我们在总体患者人群中未观察到急诊室等待时间与7天死亡率之间的关联。未来的工作应确定可能因急诊室等待时间而面临伤害风险的特定患者群体,以调整急诊室拥挤情况和风险缓解策略,减少最高风险患者的不良结局。