成人急诊科出院干预措施的范围审查。

IF 2 3区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Mary-Kate Gorlick, Shriman Balasubramanian, Gregory Han, Andy Hickner, Pranita Talukder, Peter Ad Steel, Lynn Jiang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

出院过程是急诊科(ED)就诊的关键组成部分,出院质量差往往导致患者预后不良。虽然已经实施了许多干预措施来改善这一进程,但尚未对这些干预措施进行全面审查。本研究对迄今为止的成人急诊科出院干预进行了范围界定和总结性回顾,评估了潜在的最佳实践和未来方向的文献。方法:我们于2023年2月7日对MEDLINE ALL (Ovid)、Embase (Ovid)、Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (Wiley)和CINAHL (EBSCOhost)上发表的关于ed出院干预的文献进行了范围综述。我们排除了以下研究:涉及儿科患者群体的研究;从非ed设置中放电;作为主要干预措施的ed内风险筛查和/或病例管理;干预主要发生在急诊科就诊之后(即使在出院时开始);以及非英语写作的研究。结果:初步电子检索得到3842篇独特的题目和摘要。在不同筛选阶段应用纳入/排除标准后,我们在最终评审中纳入了100篇论文和摘要。这些研究发表于2003年至2023年之间,主要来自美国(66%)。采用叙事综合的方法,对急诊科出院干预主题进行总结,形成七个概念亚组:出院方式;提供额外资源;增加一名出院协调员;后续援助;药物干预;以病人为中心的教育;以及以临床医生/出院者为中心的教育。有效的策略包括加强出院讨论和专门人员的教育,结构化的出院检查表,以及以适当的阅读水平提供指示。然而,由于很少有研究调查以患者为中心的长期结果,如急诊回访、住院和死亡率,因此缺乏干预措施的成本效益分析。此外,在目前创新急诊科出院的尝试中,英语水平有限的弱势群体的经历没有得到充分的代表。结论:我们发现,旨在提高患者对出院指示的理解的干预措施是最常被研究的,对患者预后的影响最大。这篇综述强调了以患者为中心的创新的有希望的方向;它还强调需要更多的研究来优化成人急诊科的出院过程,并要求采取行动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Scoping Review of Adult Emergency Department Discharge Interventions.

Introduction: The discharge process is a crucial component of the emergency department (ED) encounter, with poor discharge quality often leading to negative patient outcomes. While numerous interventions have been implemented to improve this process, a comprehensive review of these interventions has not been conducted. This study provides a scoping, summative review of adult ED discharge interventions to date, evaluating the literature for potential best practices and future directions.

Methods: We conducted a scoping review of published literature on MEDLINE ALL (Ovid), Embase (Ovid), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (Wiley), and CINAHL (EBSCOhost) on February 7, 2023, for articles reporting on ED-based discharge interventions. We excluded the following: studies involving pediatric patient populations; discharge from non-ED settings; in-ED risk screening and/or case management as the primary intervention; interventions occurring mostly after the ED encounter (even if initiated at time of discharge); and studies not written in English.

Results: The initial electronic database search yielded 3,842 unique titles and abstracts. After applying inclusion/exclusion criteria at various screening stages, we included 100 papers and abstracts in the final review. These studies, published between 2003 - 2023, predominantly originated from the US (66%). Using narrative synthesis, we summarized ED discharge intervention themes to form seven concept subgroups by consensus: mode of discharge; additional resource provision; addition of a discharge coordinator; follow-up assistance; pharmaceutical intervention; patient-centered education; and clinician/discharger-centered education. Effective strategies included enhanced discharge discussions and education by dedicated personnel, structured discharge checklists, and delivery of instructions at an appropriate reading level. However, because few studies have examined long-term patient-centered outcomes, such as ED return visits, hospitalizations, and mortality, cost-benefit analysis for interventions is lacking. Furthermore, the experiences of vulnerable populations who have limited-English proficiency are under-represented in current attempts to innovate ED discharge.

Conclusion: We found that interventions aimed at improving patient comprehension of discharge instructions were the most frequently studied and had the greatest impact on patient outcomes. This review highlights promising directions for patient-centered innovation; it also underscores the need for more research to optimize the adult ED discharge process and warrants a call to action.

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来源期刊
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.20%
发文量
125
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: WestJEM focuses on how the systems and delivery of emergency care affects health, health disparities, and health outcomes in communities and populations worldwide, including the impact of social conditions on the composition of patients seeking care in emergency departments.
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