Objectives: There is a lack of guidance on how to manage the multiple post-discharge issues of older people following minimal trauma hip fracture. We developed a geriatrician-staffed outpatient service for people aged ≥65 years admitted with a hip fracture who were not discharged to a nursing home. We aimed to evaluate the potential benefits of the addition of a dedicated hip fracture follow-up clinic by measuring the actions performed by such a clinic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: General medical wards admit a varied cohort of patients from the emergency department, some of whom deteriorate during their hospital stay. Currently, we use vital signs based warning scores to predict patients at risk of imminent deterioration, but there is now a growing body of literature that commonly available laboratory results may also help to identify those at risk.
Aim: To assess whether a laboratory-based admission score can predict in hospital mortality, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, medical emergency team (MET) activation or cardiac arrest in a cohort of Australian general medical patients admitted through the emergency department (ED).