AI Article Synopsis

  • The TRIAGE study aims to improve emergency department (ED) protocols by identifying low-risk patients suitable for early discharge using new inflammatory biomarkers and vital signs, addressing the issue of patient crowding.
  • Researchers collected extensive data on over 6,000 patients, focusing on demographics, triage levels (from non-urgent to resuscitation), and clinical events during their stays.
  • Findings indicate that a significant portion of patients were classified as low urgency (green), with a notable percentage experiencing no major events during their hospital visits, suggesting potential for improving discharge processes.

Article Abstract

Background: Patient crowding in emergency departments (ED) is a common challenge and associated with worsened outcome for the patients. Previous studies on biomarkers in the ED setting has focused on identification of high risk patients, and and the ability to use biomarkers to identify low-risk patients has only been sparsely examined. The broader aims of the TRIAGE study are to develop methods to identify low-risk patients appropriate for early ED discharge by combining information from a wide range of new inflammatory biomarkers and vital signs, the present baseline article aims to describe the formation of the TRIAGE database and characteristize the included patients.

Methods: We included consecutive patients ≥ 17 years admitted to hospital after triage staging in the ED. Blood samples for a biobank were collected and plasma stored in a freezer (-80 °C). Triage was done by a trained nurse using the Danish Emergency Proces Triage (DEPT) which categorizes patients as green (not urgent), yellow (urgent), orange (emergent) or red (rescusitation). Presenting complaints, admission diagnoses, comorbidities, length of stay, and 'events' during admission (any of 20 predefined definitive treatments that necessitates in-hospital care), vital signs and routine laboratory tests taken in the ED were aslo included in the database.

Results: Between September 5(th) 2013 and December 6(th) 2013, 6005 patients were included in the database and the biobank (94.1 % of all admissions). Of these, 1978 (32.9 %) were categorized as green, 2386 (39.7 %) yellow, 1616 (26.9 %) orange and 25 (0.4 %) red. Median age was 62 years (IQR 46-76), 49.8 % were male and median length of stay was 1 day (IQR 0-4). No events were found in 2658 (44.2 %) and 158 (2.6 %) were admitted to intensive or intermediate-intensive care unit and 219 (3.6 %) died within 30 days. A higher triage acuity level was associated with numerous events, including acute surgery, endovascular intervention, i.v. treatment, cardiac arrest, stroke, admission to intensive care, hospital transfer, and mortality within 30 days (p < 0.001).

Conclusion: The TRIAGE database has been completed and includes data and blood samples from 6005 unselected consecutive hospitalized patients. More than 40 % experienced no events and were therefore potentially unnecessary hospital admissions.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4667414PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13049-015-0184-1DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

patients
9
triage
8
consecutive patients
8
admitted hospital
8
identify low-risk
8
low-risk patients
8
vital signs
8
triage database
8
blood samples
8
length stay
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!