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Published in: BMC Health Services Research 1/2016

Open Access 01-12-2016 | Research article

The impact of emergency department segmentation and nursing staffing increase on inpatient mortality and management times

Authors: Pierre-Géraud Claret, Xavier Bobbia, Sylvia Olive, Christophe Demattei, Justin Yan, Robert Cohendy, Paul Landais, Jean Emmanuel de la Coussaye

Published in: BMC Health Services Research | Issue 1/2016

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Abstract

Background

The aim of our study was to investigate the impact of a new organization of our emergency department (ED) on patients’ mortality and management delays.

Methods

The ED segmentation consisted of the development of a new patient care geographical layout on a pre-existing site and changing the organization of patient flow. It took place on May 10, 2012. We did a before-after study in the ED of a university hospital, “before” (winter 2012) and “after” (summer 2012) reorganization by segmentation into sectors. All ED patients were included.

Results

Eighty-three thousand three hundred twenty-two patient visits were analyzed, 61,118 in phase “before”, 22,204 during the phase “after”. The overall inpatient mortality was 1.5 % during summer 2011 (“before” period), 1.8 % during winter 2012 (“before” period), 1.3 % during summer 2012 (“after” period) period (summer 2012 vs. winter 2012, OR = 0.72; 95 % CIs [0.61, 0.85], and summer 2012 vs. summer 2011, OR = 0.85; 95 % CIs [0.72, 0.99]). The mean (SD) time to first medical contact was 129 min (±133) during winter 2012 and 104 min (± 95) during summer 2012 (p < .05).

Conclusions

Our study showed a decrease in mortality and improvement in time to first medical contact after the segmentation of our ED and nursing staffing increase, without an increase in medical personnel. Improving patient care through optimizing ED segmentation may be an effective strategy.
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Metadata
Title
The impact of emergency department segmentation and nursing staffing increase on inpatient mortality and management times
Authors
Pierre-Géraud Claret
Xavier Bobbia
Sylvia Olive
Christophe Demattei
Justin Yan
Robert Cohendy
Paul Landais
Jean Emmanuel de la Coussaye
Publication date
01-12-2016
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Health Services Research / Issue 1/2016
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6963
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-016-1544-x

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