Background: Weekend hospital admission is associated with increased mortality, but the contributions of varying illness severity and admission time to this weekend effect remain unexplored.
Methods: We analysed unselected emergency admissions to four Oxford University National Health Service hospitals in the UK from Jan 1, 2006, to Dec 31, 2014. The primary outcome was death within 30 days of admission (in or out of hospital), analysed using Cox models measuring time from admission. The primary exposure was day of the week of admission. We adjusted for multiple confounders including demographics, comorbidities, and admission characteristics, incorporating non-linearity and interactions. Models then considered the effect of adjusting for 15 common haematology and biochemistry test results or proxies for hospital workload.
Findings: 257 596 individuals underwent 503 938 emergency admissions. 18 313 (4·7%) patients admitted as weekday energency admissions and 6070 (5·1%) patients admitted as weekend emergency admissions died within 30 days (p<0·0001). 9347 individuals underwent 9707 emergency admissions on public holidays. 559 (5·8%) died within 30 days (p<0·0001 vs weekday). 15 routine haematology and biochemistry test results were highly prognostic for mortality. In 271 465 (53·9%) admissions with complete data, adjustment for test results explained 33% (95% CI 21 to 70) of the excess mortality associated with emergency admission on Saturdays compared with Wednesdays, 52% (lower 95% CI 34) on Sundays, and 87% (lower 95% CI 45) on public holidays after adjustment for standard patient characteristics. Excess mortality was predominantly restricted to admissions between 1100 h and 1500 h (p=0·04). No hospital workload measure was independently associated with mortality (all p values >0·06).
Interpretation: Adjustment for routine test results substantially reduced excess mortality associated with emergency admission at weekends and public holidays. Adjustment for patient-level factors not available in our study might further reduce the residual excess mortality, particularly as this clustered around midday at weekends. Hospital workload was not associated with mortality. Together, these findings suggest that the weekend effect arises from patient-level differences at admission rather than reduced hospital staffing or services.
Funding: NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(17)30782-1 | DOI Listing |
Pediatr Emerg Care
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Department of Women's Health, Dell Medical School at the University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX.
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CVIR Endovasc
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
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Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA.
Background: Alzheimer's Disease and related dementias (ADRD) are a critical healthcare crisis in the State of South Carolina (SC), with over 115,000 individuals diagnosed with ADRD accounting for 11% of South Carolinians aged 65 or over and 52% of South Carolinians aged 85 or over. Exorbitant resources are used to care for these individuals, including $650 million in Medicaid dollars and over 300 million hours of unpaid caregiver time. SC has enacted a statewide plan to address ADRD with the mission of promoting "a comprehensive approach to risk reduction, early detection and diagnosis, high-quality dementia services, and a coordinated and equitable continuum of care across…" Yet, ADRD does not present uniformly across SC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Craniofac Surg
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
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Background: Although delirium is a powerful tool for identifying high-risk older patients at the emergency department (ED), the feasibility and importance of cognitive screening beyond delirium remain debated in fast-paced healthcare settings. We estimated the effect of comprehensive but pragmatic cognitive screening, capturing delirium and preexisting cognitive impairment, on predicting adverse outcomes within 90 days of admission in older adults at the ED.
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