4.5 Article

COVID-19 emergency department discharges: an outcome study

Journal

CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 21, Issue 2, Pages E126-E131

Publisher

ROY COLL PHYS LONDON EDITORIAL OFFICE
DOI: 10.7861/clinmed.2020-0817

Keywords

COVID-19; ED discharge policy; safety-net; outcomes

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The study highlighted the importance of safety-netting and appropriate follow-up services for discharged COVID-19 infected patients. Telephone follow-up identified patients needing urgent recall and face-to-face review for persistent symptoms. A COVID-19 follow-up clinic was established to provide multi-professional assessment and diagnostics for these patients.
Pressure on acute medical services in the pandemic mandated an assertive emergency department (ED) discharge policy. Given the potential for subsequent deterioration and growing appreciation of complications relating to COVID-19 infection, this follow up study was instigated to provide clinical reassurance that discharged patients had followed a safe clinical course. 199 patients discharged from the ED of our central London hospital were identified over a 20-day period at the height of the pandemic in April 2020. 44 had already reattended ED and 12 had been admitted. At 2-week telephone follow-up, 14 patients were identified who required urgent recall for assessment. At 4-week telephone follow-up, 87 patients were identified with persistent symptoms requiring face to face review. A COVID-19 follow-up clinic was therefore established to provide multi-professional review and diagnostics. 65 patients attended for this assessment. This is the first report on outcomes in COVID-19 infected patients discharged from an ED. It highlights the importance of safety-netting after discharge, the difficulty in predicting which patients might deteriorate and the need for appropriate follow up services.

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