Annals of Geriatric Medicine and Research (Mar 2024)

Older Adult Patients in the Emergency Department: Which Patients should be Selected for a Different Approach?

  • Nere Larrea Aguirre,
  • Susana García Gutiérrez,
  • Oscar Miro,
  • Sira Aguiló,
  • Javier Jacob,
  • Aitor Alquézar-Arbé,
  • Guillermo Burillo,
  • Cesáreo Fernandez,
  • Pere Llorens,
  • Cesar Roza Alonso,
  • Ivana Tavasci Lopez,
  • Mónica Cañete,
  • Pedro Ruiz Asensio,
  • Beatriz Paderne Díaz,
  • Teresa Pablos Pizarro,
  • Rigoberto Jesús del Rio Navarro,
  • Núria Perelló Viola,
  • Lourdes Hernández-Castells,
  • Alejandro Cortés Soler,
  • Elena Sánchez Fernández-Linares,
  • Jesús Ángel Sánchez Serrano,
  • Patxi Ezponda,
  • Andrea Martínez Lorenzo,
  • Juan Vicente Ortega Liarte,
  • Susana Sánchez Ramón,
  • Asumpta Ruiz Aranda,
  • Francisco Javier Martín-Sánchez,
  • Juan González del Castillo,

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4235/agmr.23.0121
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 1
pp. 9 – 19

Abstract

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Background While multidimensional and interdisciplinary assessment of older adult patients improves their short-term outcomes after evaluation in the emergency department (ED), this assessment is time-consuming and ill-suited for the busy environment. Thus, identifying patients who will benefit from this strategy is challenging. Therefore, this study aimed to identify older adult patients suitable for a different ED approach as well as independent variables associated with poor short-term clinical outcomes. Methods We included all patients ≥65 years attending 52 EDs in Spain over 7 days. Sociodemographic, comorbidity, and baseline functional status data were collected. The outcomes were 30-day mortality, re-presentation, hospital readmission, and the composite of all outcomes. Results During the study among 96,014 patients evaluated in the ED, we included 23,338 patients ≥65 years—mean age, 78.4±8.1 years; 12,626 (54.1%) women. During follow-up, 5,776 patients (24.75%) had poor outcomes after evaluation in the ED: 1,140 (4.88%) died, 4,640 (20.51) returned to the ED, and 1,739 (7.69%) were readmitted 30 days after discharge following the index visit. A model including male sex, age ≥75 years, arrival by ambulance, Charlson Comorbidity Index ≥3, and functional impairment had a C-index of 0.81 (95% confidence interval, 0.80–0.82) for 30-day mortality. Conclusion Male sex, age ≥75 years, arrival by ambulance, functional impairment, or severe comorbidity are features of patients who could benefit from approaches in the ED different from the common triage to improve the poor short-term outcomes of this population.

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