posted on 2016-12-16, 14:35authored bySimon Paul Conroy, Kharwar Ansari, Mark Williams, Emily Laithwaite, Ben Teasdale, J. Dawson, S. Mason, Jay Banerjee
BACKGROUND: the ageing demographic means that increasing numbers of older people will be attending emergency departments (EDs). Little previous research has focused on the needs of older people in ED and there have been no evaluations of comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) embedded within the ED setting. METHODS: a pre-post cohort study of the impact of embedding CGA within a large ED in the East Midlands, UK. The primary outcome was admission avoidance from the ED, with readmissions, length of stay and bed-day use as secondary outcomes. RESULTS: attendances to ED increased in older people over the study period, whereas the ED conversion rate fell from 69.6 to 61.2% in people aged 85+, and readmission rates in this group fell from 26.0% at 90 days to 19.9%. In-patient bed-day use increased slightly, as did the mean length of stay. DISCUSSION: it is possible to embed CGA within EDs, which is associated with improvements in operational outcomes.
History
Citation
Age and Ageing, 2014, 43 (1), pp. 109-114
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Age and Ageing
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP) for British Geriatrics Society