• Medicine · Nov 2020

    There is no association between weekend admissions and delays in antibiotic administration for patients admitted to the emergency department with suspicion of sepsis: A retrospective cohort study.

    • Bruno V B Fahel, Marina Manciola, Gabriel Lima, Manoel H Barbosa, Chuva Starteri, João Gabriel Rosa Ramos, Juliana R Caldas, and Passos Rogério da Hora RDH Critical Care Department Hospital São Rafael Rede D'OR São Luiz (HSR)..
    • Escola Bahiana de Medicina e Saúde Pública (EBMSP).
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2020 Nov 20; 99 (47): e23256.

    AbstractAdmission to the emergency department (ED) on weekends has been associated with an increase in mortality and poor outcomes, but the associated findings are not consistent. It has been hypothesized that this association may be due to lower adherence to standards of care.This study was conducted to evaluate whether weekend admissions to the ED increases the time to antibiotic administration in septic patients.A retrospective cohort study of adult patients who were included in the sepsis protocol at a tertiary ED between January 2015 and December 2017 was performed. The sepsis protocol was activated for all patients with suspected severe infection.A total of 831 patients with a mean age of 59 ± 21 years were evaluated, of whom 217 (26.1%) were admitted on weekends. In addition, 391 (47.1%) patients were male, and 84 (10.1%) died in the hospital. Overall, the mean sequential organ failure assessment score was 2 ± 1.9, and the mean Charlson comorbidity index was 3.7 ± 3. The time to antibiotic administration was similar between patients admitted on weekends (36.29 ± 50 minutes CI 95%) and patients admitted on weekdays (44.44 ± 69 minutes CI 95%), P = .06; U = 60174.0. Additionally, mortality was similar in both groups of patients, with a 10.3% mortality rate on weekdays and a 9.8% mortality rate on weekends, P = 821.In this cohort of patients with suspicion of sepsis in the ED, admission on weekends was not associated with increased delays in antibiotic therapy or higher mortality rates.

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