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J Korean Soc Emerg Med > Volume 33(1); 2022 > Article
Journal of The Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2022;33(1): 113-120.
응급의료센터로 전원되는 요양병원 환자들의 특징
박지호1 , 이대섭1 , 민문기1 , 류지호1 , 이민지1 , 조영모2
1양산부산대학교병원 응급의학과
2부산대학교병원 응급의학과
Characteristics of patients transferred from long-term care hospital to emergency department
Ji Ho Park1 , Daesup Lee1 , Mun Ki Min1 , Ji Ho Ryu1 , Min Jee Lee1 , Young Mo Jo2
1Department of Emergency Medicine, Pusan National University Yangsan Hospital, Yangsan, Korea
2Department of Emergency Medicine, Pusan National University Hospital, Busan, Korea
Correspondence  Daesup Lee ,Tel: 055-360-2143, Fax: 055-360-2173, Email: kurt91@hanmail.net,
Received: August 24, 2021; Revised: October 29, 2021   Accepted: November 18, 2021.  Published online: February 28, 2022.
ABSTRACT
Objective:
This study was undertaken to assess the appropriateness of transfer of patients from a long-term care hospital to the emergency department (ED).
Method:
We conducted a retrospective study in a Wide Regional Emergency Center in Gyeongsangnam-do between January 2019 and December 2019. The patients were divided into groups (direct visit, transferred from other hospitals, and transferred from long-term care hospitals [LTCHs]). The baseline characteristics, Korean Triage and Acuity Scale (KTAS), vital signs, length of stay, ED disposition, cost, clinical outcome, and instances of application of the “Act on decisions on life-sustaining treatment” were collected.
Results:
A total of 30,142 patients were enrolled during the study period. Twenty-one thousand, nine hundred and sixty-five patients were in the direct visit group, 7,057 patients were transferred from other hospitals, and 1,120 patients were transferred from LTCHs. Hospital admission was higher in cases of transfer from other hospitals and LTCHs (LTCHs, 63.8%; transferred from other hospitals, 64.1%, direct visit, 30.1%; P<0.001). Re-transfer and mortality in the ED were much higher (re-transfer: LTCHs, 11.0%; transferred from other hospitals 3.8%, direct visit 1.9%; P<0.001 and mortality in ED: 2.9%, 0.8%, 1.4%; respectively P<0.001). In the LCTH group after admission, mortality was higher (mortality: 16.2%, 5.4%, 7.1% for LTCH transfers and direct respectively; P<0.001). The implementation rate of the “Act on decisions on life-sustaining treatment”, the well-dying law, was higher in the LTCHs (26.6%, 12.5%, and 11.4% LTCH transfers, and direct respectively; P<0.001).
Conclusion:
In the LTCH group, re-transfer, mortality, and the implementation rate of the “Act on decisions on life-sustaining treatment” were higher than in the other groups.
Key words: Transfer; Emergency department; Nursing home
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