PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Initial disease severity and quality of care of emergency department sepsis patients who are older or younger than 70 years of age.

  • Mats Warmerdam,
  • Frank Stolwijk,
  • Anjelica Boogert,
  • Meera Sharma,
  • Lisa Tetteroo,
  • Jacinta Lucke,
  • Simon Mooijaart,
  • Annemieke Ansems,
  • Laura Esteve Cuevas,
  • Douwe Rijpsma,
  • Bas de Groot

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0185214
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. e0185214

Abstract

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Due to atypical symptom presentation older patients are more prone to delayed sepsis recognition. We investigated whether initial disease severity before emergency department (ED) treatment (including treatable acute organ dysfunction), quality of ED sepsis care and the impact on mortality was different between patients older and younger than 70 years. If differences exist, improvements are needed for ED management of older patients at risk for sepsis.In this observational multicenter study, ED patients who were hospitalized with a suspected infection were stratified by age 0.05).Older sepsis patients are sicker at ED presentation but are not treated more expediently or reliably despite their extra acuity The presence of twice as much treatable acute organ dysfunction before ED treatment suggests that acute organ dysfunction is recognized relatively late by general practitioners or patients in the out of hospital setting.