received an EIT consultation were compared to those who received standard care without an EIT consultation. Patients were excluded if they were < 18 years of age and had a documented limitation of care (DNAR or advanced directive) prior to arrival to the ED. The study cohort was identified by an electronic data query of the electronic medical record. The primary outcome of interest was hospital length of stay (LOS). Secondary outcomes of interest included mortality, ICU LOS, ventilator free days and change in modified SOFA score. Results: Eight hundred and seventy patients met inclusion criteria. Of these, 546 had all the variables available to calculate a modified SOFA score resulting in 148 (Tests) who received an EIT consult and 398 (Controls) who did not. Following propensity matching using age, BMI and race, there was no difference in the primary outcome of interest: hospital LOS. Patients who received an EIT consultation had a longer median (IQR) ED boarding time, 8(4-14) hours vs. 4(2-6) hours, p < 0.001. Secondary analysis noted that there was a greater probability that the number of EIT cases increased as the quartile of baseline modified SOFA score increased, p < 0.001. At 24 hours, the modified SOFA scores were significantly higher than baseline for both test and control cases. However, at 48 hours the modified SOFA scores were still significantly higher than baseline for control cases, but not for test cases. Conclusion: This retrospective observational study identified that an ED-centric critical care consultation service with specialty trained physicians for ICU boarders, is utilized in patients with longer boarding times and higher severity of illness. This is associated with an improvement in the baseline modified SOFA score at 48 hours of hospitalization.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.