Impact of the four-hour National Emergency Access Target on 30 day mortality, access block and chronic emergency department overcrowding in Australian emergency departments
Autor: | Daniel M Fatovich, Nicola Man, David Mountain, Nick Gibson, Fenglian Xu, Sally McCarthy, Ken Hillman, Shizar Nahidi, Ghasem Toloo, Roberto Forero, Drew B Richardson, Hanh Ngo, Antonio Celenza, Mohammed Mohsin, Gerry FitzGerald |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
business.industry Mortality rate Emergency department overcrowding Australian capital 030208 emergency & critical care medicine Overcrowding Quarter (United States coin) Patient flow 03 medical and health sciences Trend analysis 0302 clinical medicine 30 day mortality Emergency medicine Emergency Medicine medicine 030212 general & internal medicine business |
Zdroj: | Emergency Medicine Australasia. 31:58-66 |
ISSN: | 1742-6731 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1742-6723.13151 |
Popis: | Objective Previous research reported strong associations between ED overcrowding and mortality. We assessed the effect of the Four‐Hour Rule (4HR) intervention (Western Australia (WA) 2009), then nationally rolled out as the National Emergency Access Target (Australia 2012) policy on mortality and patient flow. Methods A longitudinal cohort study of a population‐wide 4HR, for 16 hospitals across WA, New South Wales (NSW), Australian Capital Territory (ACT) and Queensland (QLD). Mortality trends were analysed for 2–4 years before and after 4HR using interrupted time series technique. Main outcomes included the effect of 4HR on patient flow markers; admitted 30 day mortality trends; and patient flow marker performance during the study period. Results There were 40 281 deaths from 952 726 emergency admissions. All jurisdictions, except ACT, had improved flow and access block after 4HR. Age‐standardised mortality was decreasing before the intervention. Post‐intervention, WA had a significant reduction in mortality rate of −0.28 per 1000 patients per quarter (P = 0.040) while QLD had mixed results and NSW/ACT trends did not change significantly. Meta‐regression of aggregated data for hospitals grouped on flow performances did not show significant mortality changes associated with the policy. Conclusions The 4HR was introduced as a means of driving hospital performance by applying a time target. Patient flow improved, but the evidence for mortality benefit is controversial with improvement only in WA. Further research with more representative data from a larger number of hospitals over a longer time across Australia is needed to increase statistical power to detect long‐term effects of the policy. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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