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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 10/2018

01-10-2018 | Concise Research Reports

Rising Emergency Admission and Readmission Rates—a Retrospective Study of Demographic and Socio-economic Factors

Authors: Declan Byrne, MB MSc FRCPI, Richard Conway, MD MRCPI, Seán Cournane, PhD, Deirdre O’Riordan, MD FRCPI, Bernard Silke, MD DSc FRCPI

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 10/2018

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Excerpt

Emergency hospital admissions have been rising over time1; the precise reasons have been debated. A lowered threshold to admit, or changing demographic population structures have been proposed as explanations.2 Our institution established an acute medical admission unit in 2002 and its performance in relation to clinical outcomes has been well described.3 We have developed a risk score that is related exponentially to 30-day in-hospital mortality; this estimates acute illness severity and case complexity using both laboratory (multiple-variable fractional polynomial method4) and blood culture data supplemented by case complexity estimates calculated from discharge codes (ICD9/ICD10)—Charlson Comorbidity Index and the Chronic Disabling Score. From such determinants, we can assess temporal change in case acuity or complexity, and relate these to admission thresholds.5 Our study’s purpose was to examine16 years of acute medical admissions (2002–2017) at St. James’ Hospital, Dublin, to investigate how the incidence rates for emergency medical admissions might have changed over time and to relate such to socio-economic and societal structural changes. …
Literature
4.
go back to reference Silke B, Kellett J, Rooney T, Bennett K, O’Riordan D. An improved medical admissions risk system using multivariable fractional polynomial logistic regression modelling. Q J Med. 2010;103(1):23–32.CrossRef Silke B, Kellett J, Rooney T, Bennett K, O’Riordan D. An improved medical admissions risk system using multivariable fractional polynomial logistic regression modelling. Q J Med. 2010;103(1):23–32.CrossRef
6.
go back to reference Kelly ATC. The national deprivation index for health and health services research - update 2013. Small Area Health Research Unit, Department of Health and Primary Care: Trinity College Dublin; 2013. Kelly ATC. The national deprivation index for health and health services research - update 2013. Small Area Health Research Unit, Department of Health and Primary Care: Trinity College Dublin; 2013.
Metadata
Title
Rising Emergency Admission and Readmission Rates—a Retrospective Study of Demographic and Socio-economic Factors
Authors
Declan Byrne, MB MSc FRCPI
Richard Conway, MD MRCPI
Seán Cournane, PhD
Deirdre O’Riordan, MD FRCPI
Bernard Silke, MD DSc FRCPI
Publication date
01-10-2018
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 10/2018
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-018-4534-3

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