Eagle D J, Rideout E, Price P, McCann C, Wonnacott E
J Emerg Nurs. 1993 Jun;19(3):212-8.
To determine the use pattern of the emergency department by people 65 years of age and older.
Cross-sectional survey from chart audits and personal interviews of all people older than 64 years attending an emergency department in a Canadian teaching hospital.
All patients older than 64 years attending the emergency department during the months of February, May, August, and November. Comparison samples of adults aged 16 to 64 years attending the same emergency department and patients older than 64 years attending the emergency department of a similar hospital during the same period were obtained.
Fifteen percent of the total population attending the emergency department in 1 year were 65 years of age and older (N = 1744). The average age was 75 years; 57% were female, 53% were married, and 40% were widowed. Eighty-four percent lived in their own homes and 6% lived in nursing homes. Twenty-two percent were classified as emergent, 75% as urgent, and 3% as deferrable; 45% were admitted. The discharge diagnoses were widely divergent, with the most common being soft-tissue injury (9.1%), fracture (7.1%), arteriosclerotic heart disease (6.1%), congestive heart failure (4.1%), and abdominal pain (3.4%). Patients tended to appear in the emergency department more frequently during the day shift (60%) and less frequently on weekends. Forty-five percent had never attended the emergency department or been admitted to hospital in the previous year; 30% had attended or been admitted once.
Elderly persons do not misuse the services of the emergency department. They come because they are acutely ill; they are not frequent attenders, and their presenting complaints do require intervention (frequently hospitalization). The study findings are generalizable to the older population in the Hamilton-Wentworth region and raise such questions as whether some hospital admissions could have been avoided by earlier interventions in the community.
确定65岁及以上老年人在急诊科的就诊模式。
通过对一家加拿大教学医院急诊科所有64岁以上患者的病历审核和个人访谈进行横断面调查。
2月、5月、8月和11月期间在急诊科就诊的所有64岁以上患者。获取了同期在同一急诊科就诊的16至64岁成年人以及在类似医院急诊科就诊的64岁以上患者作为对照样本。
1年内在该急诊科就诊的总人数中,15%为65岁及以上(N = 1744)。平均年龄为75岁;57%为女性,53%已婚,40%丧偶。84%居住在自己家中,6%住在养老院。22%被归类为紧急情况,75%为 urgent(此处原文有误,可能是urgent,意为紧急但非绝对紧急的情况),3%为可推迟情况;45%被收治入院。出院诊断差异很大,最常见的是软组织损伤(9.1%)、骨折(7.1%)、动脉硬化性心脏病(6.1%)、充血性心力衰竭(4.1%)和腹痛(3.4%)。患者倾向于在白天班期间更频繁地出现在急诊科(60%),在周末则较少。45%的患者在前一年从未去过急诊科或住院;30%的患者去过或住过一次院。
老年人并未滥用急诊科服务。他们前来就诊是因为患有急性病;他们并非频繁就诊者,且他们提出的主诉确实需要干预(通常是住院治疗)。该研究结果可推广至汉密尔顿 - 温特沃斯地区的老年人群体,并引发了一些问题,比如是否可以通过社区早期干预避免一些住院情况。