1. Emergency Department Vital Signs and Outcomes After Discharge
- Author
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Gabayan, Gelareh Z, Gould, Michael K, Weiss, Robert E, Derose, Stephen F, Chiu, Vicki Y, and Sarkisian, Catherine A
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Female ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Male ,Odds Ratio ,Patient Discharge ,Retrospective Studies ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Vital Signs ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveVital 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.MethodsWe 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 [SpO2 ] values measured closest to discharge) using standard thresholds for abnormal and thresholds derived from the study data.ResultsOf 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 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
- Published
- 2017