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United States

2017

Department of Emergency Medicine Faculty Papers

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Associations Of Emergency Department Length Of Stay With Publicly Reported Quality-Of-Care Measures., Anna Marie Chang, Amber Lin, Rongwei Fu, K. John Mcconnell, Benjamin Sun Feb 2017

Associations Of Emergency Department Length Of Stay With Publicly Reported Quality-Of-Care Measures., Anna Marie Chang, Amber Lin, Rongwei Fu, K. John Mcconnell, Benjamin Sun

Department of Emergency Medicine Faculty Papers

OBJECTIVE: The Institute of Medicine identified emergency department (ED) crowding as a critical threat to patient safety. We assess the association between changes in publicly reported ED length of stay (LOS) and changes in quality-of-care measures in a national cohort of hospitals.

METHODS: Longitudinal analysis of 2012 and 2013 data from the American Hospital Association (AHA) Survey, Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Cost Reports, and CMS Hospital Compare. We included hospitals reporting Hospital Compare timeliness measure of LOS for admitted patients. We used AHA and CMS data to incorporate hospital predictors of interest. We used the method of …


Factors Associated With Post-Arrest Withdrawal Of Life-Sustaining Therapy., Anne V. Grossestreuer, David F. Gaieski, Benjamin S. Abella, Douglas J. Wiebe, Ari Moskowitz, Daniel J. Ikeda, Jason S. Haukoos, Sarah M. Perman Jan 2017

Factors Associated With Post-Arrest Withdrawal Of Life-Sustaining Therapy., Anne V. Grossestreuer, David F. Gaieski, Benjamin S. Abella, Douglas J. Wiebe, Ari Moskowitz, Daniel J. Ikeda, Jason S. Haukoos, Sarah M. Perman

Department of Emergency Medicine Faculty Papers

INTRODUCTION: Most successfully resuscitated cardiac arrest patients do not survive to hospital discharge. Many have withdrawal of life sustaining therapy (WLST) as a result of the perception of poor neurologic prognosis. The characteristics of these patients and differences in their post-arrest care are largely unknown.

METHODS: Utilizing the Penn Alliance for Therapeutic Hypothermia Registry, we identified a cohort of 1311 post-arrest patients from 26 hospitals from 2010 to 2014 who remained comatose after return of spontaneous circulation. We stratified patients by whether they had WLST post-arrest and analyzed demographic, arrest, and post-arrest variables.

RESULTS: In our cohort, 565 (43%) patients …