4.3 Article

Emergency department admissions to the intensive care unit - a national retrospective study

Journal

BMC EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12873-021-00517-0

Keywords

Emergency medicine; Critical care; Epidemiology; Mortality; International classifications of diseases

Funding

  1. Region Ostergotland
  2. public healthcare organization
  3. Linkoping University

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This study found that patients admitted to intensive care units (ICU) directly from the emergency department (ED) were most commonly due to intoxication, trauma, and neurological conditions. However, there were significant variations in causes of ICU admissions based on age, sex, and hospital type. ICU mortality rate was 7.2%, with higher rates seen in certain patient demographics and medical conditions.
Background Emergency departments (EDs) see a rising number of patients, but only a small fraction of ED patients need immediate intensive care. The characteristics of these patients are mostly unknown and there is reason to believe that there are large inter-hospital differences in thresholds for intensive care admissions from the ED. The purpose of this study was to give a nationwide overview of ED admissions directly to intensive care units. Methods We used the Swedish Intensive care Registry to identify all patients admitted to intensive care from the ED (January 1, 2013 until June 7, 2018). The primary outcome was discharge diagnosis after intensive care (primary ICU diagnosis code). ICU mortality and ICU admission due to only observation were analyzed as secondary outcomes. Results 110,072 ICU admissions were included, representing 94,546 unique patients. Intoxication, trauma and neurological conditions were the most common causes for intensive care, but large variations according to age, sex and hospital type were seen. Intoxication was the most prevalent diagnosis in young adults (46.8% of admissions in 18-29 years old), whereas infectious diseases predominated in the elderly (17.0% in 65-79 years old). Overall, ICU mortality was 7.2%, but varied substantially with age, sex, type of hospital and medical condition. Cardiac conditions had the highest mortality rates, reaching 32.9%. The mortality was higher in academic centers compared to rural hospitals (9.3% vs 5.0%). It was more common to be admitted to ICU for only observation in rural hospitals than in academic centers (20.1% vs 7.8%). Being admitted to ICU only for observation was most common in patients with intoxication (30.6%). Conclusions Overall, intoxication was the most common cause for ICU admission from the ED. However, causes of ED ICU admissions differ substantially according to age, sex and hospital type. Being admitted to the ICU only for observation was most common in intoxicated patients.

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