• Crit Care Resusc · Jun 2012

    The uptake of an early warning system in an Australian emergency department: a pilot study.

    • Julie Considine, Elspeth Lucas, and Bart Wunderlich.
    • Deakin University - Northern Health Clinical Partnership, Deakin University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia. julie.considine@deakin.edu.au
    • Crit Care Resusc. 2012 Jun 1;14(2):135-41.

    ObjectivesTo evaluate the uptake of an emergency department early warning system (ED EWS) for recognition of, and response to, clinical deterioration.Design, Setting And ParticipantsA descriptive exploratory study conducted in an urban district hospital in Melbourne, Australia. Systematic sampling was used to identify every 10th patient for whom the ED EWS was activated from May 2009 to May 2011.Main Outcome MeasuresPatient characteristics, ED system data and ED EWS activation characteristics.ResultsED EWS activation occurred in 1.5% of ED patients; 204 patients were included in this pilot study. The median age was 65.1 years (interquartile range [IQR], 47.8-77.5 years), 89.2% of patients were classified as triage category 2 or 3, and 82.4% of patients were seen by medical staff before ED EWS activation. Hypotension (27.7%) and tachycardia (23.7%) were the most common reasons for ED EWS activation. Median duration of clinical instability was 39 minutes (IQR, 5- 129 minutes). Nurses made 93.1% of ED EWS activations. Median time between documenting physiological abnormalities and ED EWS activation was 5 minutes (IQR, 0- 20). Most patients (57.8%) required hospital admission: 4.4% of patients required intensive care unit admission.ConclusionsThe ED EWS resulted in at least two formal reports of clinical deterioration in ED patients per day, indicating reasonable uptake by clinicians. A greater understanding of clinical deterioration in ED patients is warranted to inform an evidence-based approach to recognition of, and response to, clinical deterioration in ED patients.

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