1. Characteristics of unplanned hospitalisations among cancer patients in Singapore.
- Author
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Zhuang Q, Chan JSE, See LKY, Chiang J, Suhaimi SR, Chua TWL, and Venkataraman A
- Subjects
- Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Length of Stay, Patient Admission, Retrospective Studies, Singapore epidemiology, Hospitalization, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Cancer is a pervasive global problem with significant healthcare utilisation and cost. Emergency departments (EDs) see large numbers of patients with oncologic emergencies and act as "gate-keepers" to subsequent hospital admissions. A proportion of such hospital admissions are rapidly discharged within 2 days and may be potentially avoidable., Methods: Over a 6-month period, we conducted a retrospective audit of active cancer patients presenting to the ED with subsequent admission to the Department of Medical Oncology. Our aims were to identify independent factors associated with a length of stay ≤2 days; and characterise the clinical and resource needs of these short admissions., Results: Among all medical oncology admissions, 24.4% were discharged within 2 days. Compared to longer stayers, patients with short admissions were significantly younger ( P =0.010), had lower National Early Warning Scores (NEWS) ( P =0.006), and had a lower proportion of gastrointestinal and hepatobiliary cancers ( P =0.005). Among short admissions, common presenting medical problems were infections (n=144, 36.3%), pain (n=116, 29.2%), gastrointestinal complaints (n=85, 21.4%) and respiratory complaints (n=76, 19.1%). These admissions required investigations and treatments already available at the ED., Conclusion: Short admissions have low resource needs and may be managed in the ED. This may help save valuable inpatient bed-days and reduce overall healthcare costs.
- Published
- 2021
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