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- M Malik, Z Moore, D Patton, T O'Connor, and L E Nugent.
- Emergency Department, St. James's Hospital, James's Street, Dublin 8, Ireland. Electronic address: mflynn@stjames.ie.
- Int Emerg Nurs. 2018 Mar 1; 37: 52-60.
BackgroundNursing assessment of elderly patients is imperative in Emergency Departments (ED) while providing interventions that increase independence facilitating discharge to primary healthcare.AimsTo systematically review the impact of geriatric focused nurse assessment and intervention in the ED on hospital utilisation in terms of admission rate, ED revisits and length of hospital stay (LOHS).MethodsSearch strategy used following databases; Cochrane, Medline, CINAHL, Embase, Scopus and Web of Knowledge; And terms; geriatric nurse assessment, nurse discharge planning, geriatric nurse specialist, nurse intervention, emergency department, accident and emergency, patient outcomes, discharge, admissions, readmissions, hospital utilization, hospitalization, length of stay/hospital stay.ResultsNine studies were included: seven RCTs and two prospective pre/post-intervention designed studies. Geriatric focused nursing assessment and interventions did not have a statistical impact on hospitalization, readmissions, LOHS and ED revisits. Risk screening and comprehensive geriatric assessment extending into primary care may reduce readmission rates but not affect hospitalization. An increase in ED visits in the intervention group at 30 days post-intervention was noted.ConclusionInconsistencies in assessment and interventions for the older person in ED are apparent. Further research evaluating a standardised risk assessment tool and innovative interventions extending into primary healthcare is required.Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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