Stress echocardiography is a cost saving method for the investigation of chest pain in patients with low-intermediate risk of flow limiting coronary artery disease in the district hospital setting.
The Royal College of Physicians' Acute care toolkit 10 has recommended the use of the AMB score as an aid to determining patients suitable for ambulatory care. As this score has only been previously validated in one centre, the present study calculated the score of 200 patients referred to the medical take to see if it successfully identifi ed patients who had a length of stay of less than 12 hours. In our test centre, the score was found to have a reduced sensitivity compared with the original centre (88 vs 96%) and a positive predictive value of 39%. Therefore in our hospital this was not a useful scoring system, and other trusts need to be aware that the AMB score may not be as effective as the original study suggested.
In many hospitals a variety of triage systems are used by senior medical staff to identify likely length of stay (LOS) of acute medical admissions and thus facilitate a streamlined admission under either acute medicine or general internal medicine (GIM). The authors evaluated if senior nursing staff on the medical assessment unit could triage patients depending on their predicted LOS as accurately as consultant acute physicians. Each of 193 medical admissions were independently triaged by both groups to either acute medicine (<48 hours) or GIM (>48 hours) depending on predicted LOS. The accuracy of patient triage was identical for senior nursing staff and consultants (80.8% vs 81.9%), when 95% confidence intervals are taken into account. Nursing staff triaged patients a mean of 8.5 hours earlier than consultants. This study demonstrates that triage of acute medical admissions is a practical extension of the senior nursing role and has been successfully implemented, with accuracy of nursing triage (83.5%) being maintained in a repeat study 6 months later.
Background: There are currently several different definitions for sepsis. This study looked at what proportion of acute medical admissions were identified by the different definitions, what correlation they have, and how many patients would require a review with results in 1 hour. Methods: Data on 212 admissions was collected, on time of admission and review, and number of patients with sepsis by each diagnostic criteria calculated. Results: The NICE criteria identified 69% of admissions as requiring review within one hour, compared to 6% with qSOFA and 18% with previous sepsis definitions. The mean time to review was 1hr 18min, and only 50% of patients meeting the NICE criteria were reviewed within one hour. Conclusions: The proposed NICE guidance will be challenging to implement with current resources.
Neutropenic sepsis can be life threatening, with mortality 2-21%. The heterogeneity of patients referred with “suspected neutropenic sepsis” has led to strategies being developed to risk-stratify patients and identify those with a low risk of septic complications that could be managed in the outpatient setting, such as The Multinational Association for Supportive Care in Cancer score (MASCC). Outcomes for patients referred with suspected neutropenic sepsis were assessed before and after use of MASCC guided early-supported discharge. 50/123 (41%) patients over 24 months were eligible for early-supported discharge. 26/50 patients had same-day discharge, 14 had overnight admission, 8 stayed 2 nights and 2 stayed 3 nights. Patients received on average 2 follow-up telephone consultations. There were 5 readmissions (10%) and no adverse events. In comparison group; 8 patients over 3-months would have been suitable, potentially saving 40 bed-days. This shows MASCC guided early-supported discharge is safe and cost-effective.
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