1. Admission avoidance in tonsillitis and peritonsillar abscess: A prospective national audit during the initial peak of the COVID‐19 pandemic
- Author
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Hardman, John C, Swords, Chloe, Rocke, John P J, Walker, Abigail, Bryan, James E, Milinis, Kristijonas, Mathew, Rajeev G, Jones, Gareth H, McLaren, Oliver, Smith, Matthew E, Hutson, Kristian, Slovick, Anna, McNally, George, Burgess, Andrea, Shakeel, Muhammad, Gomati, Anas, Bance, Manohar, Lancaster, Jeffrey, Maple, Natalie, Smyth, Catherine, Dorris, Colm, Kelly, Andrew, McCrory, David, MBhatt, Yogesh, Jama, Guled M, Morgan, Montio, Perkins, Victoria, Spraggs, Paul, Geyton, Thomas, Takwoingi, Yohanna, Gopala‐Krishnan, Srinish, Strachan, David, Taylor, Robert, Puvanendran, Mark, Egan, Matthew, Rennie, Catherine, Cereceda‐Monteoliva, Nicholas, Cardozo, Arun, Tse, Antonia, McRae, Duncan, Burgan, Omar T, Reddy, Ekambar, Wright, Brendan, Kara, Naveed, Walters, Holt, Williams, Richard, Walkden, Alex, Quraishi, Muhammad, Stobbs, Nicola, Chatzimichalis, Michail, Elston, Emily, Khemani, Sameer, Fang, Sean, Kirkland, Paul, Vasanthan, Rishi, Miah, Mohammed, Lee, Kristina, Mclarnon, Claire, Williams, Mark R, Okonkwo, Okechukwu, Mughal, Zahir, Karagama, Yakubu, Xie, Carol, De, Mriganka, Amlani, Aakash, Jassar, Patrick, Cao, Han, Patil, Sachin, Wong, Billy, Philpott, Carl, Meghji, Sheneen, Das, Sudip, Cole, Simon, Vijendren, Ananth, Ally, Munira, Kothari, Prasad, Schechter, Eyal, Ranganathan, Baskaran, Advani, Rajeev, Toma, Shamim, Haymes, Adam, Shakir, Adam, Yap, Darren, Costello, Rhodri, Wallace, Jennifer, Chisholm, Edward, Ojha, Shilpa, Spielmann, Patrick, Steven, Richard, Supriya, Mrinal, Mathew, Elizabeth, Masood, Ajmal, Dewhurst, Samuel, Ward, Victoria, Darwich, Ayman, Patiar, Shalini, Nemeth, Zsofia, Terry, Roland, Vithlani, Rohan, Bowyer, Duncan, Yang, Ding, Monksfield, Peter, Corbett, Peter, Siddiq, Azher, Whittaker, Joshua D, Ramakrishnan, Yujay, Cho, Wai Sum, Cain, Angus, Mondal, Bobby, Izzat, Steve, Ainine, Amru, Nair, Dilip, Tan, Shawn, Daudia, Anu, Gilchrist, Jennifer, Tan, Neil, Kim, Min, Truro, Singh, Vijay, Hallett, Emma, Ray, Jaydip, Yu, Beverley, DeCarpentier, John, Chandrasekar, Bhargavi, Bhimrao, Sanjiv, Eastwood, Michael, Sunkaraneni, Vishnu S, Lee, Chang Woo, Moore, Andrew, Shetty, Prajwal, Mawby, Thomas, Bisson, Elspeth, Jindal, Mudit, Yao, Alexander, Geyer, Marcel, Mohammed, Omnya, Jones, Huw, Ghasemi, Aria Amir, Trinidade, Aaron, Hardy, Alistair, Little, Sarah, Munroe‐Gray, Tiffany, Bennett, Alex, Li, Lucy, Khalid‐Raja, Mamoona, Thomas, George, Elmorsy, Mohamed, Williams, Clare, Zammit, Matthew, Seymour, Kay, Warner, Elinor, Potter, Chris, Easto, Rachel, Shaida, Azhar, Elshahhat, Mohamed, Karamchandani, Dheeraj, Gill, Charn, Syed, Irfan, Walker, David, Stewart, Kirsten, Simmons, Mark, Abou‐Foul, Ahmad K, Bathala, Srinivasalu, Emerson, Hannah, Almeyda, John, Pericleous, Agamemnon, Fahmy, Fahmy, Kaleva, AnnaI, Moorthy, Ram, Bates, James, Wasson, Joseph, Selwyn, Anya, Daultrey, Charles, Patel, Sanjay, Siau, Derrick, Sawant, Rupali, Moore, Phillip, and Rajamanickan, Senthil Kumar
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Male ,Time Factors ,multicentre ,Tonsillitis ,ambulatory ,Comorbidity ,Patient Admission ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pandemic ,Ambulatory Care ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Aged, 80 and over ,Acute Tonsillitis ,Disease Management ,Outpatient ,Middle Aged ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Ambulatory ,Female ,Original Article ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Ambulatory care ,stomatognathic system ,discharge ,Internal medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Humans ,observational ,Peritonsillar Abscess ,Pandemics ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Clinical Audit ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,COVID-19 ,Original Articles ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,United Kingdom ,Otorhinolaryngology ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Objectives To report changes in practice brought about by COVID‐19 and the implementation of new guidelines for the management of tonsillitis and peritonsillar abscess (PTA), and to explore factors relating to unscheduled re‐presentations for patients discharged from the emergency department (ED). Design Prospective multicentre national audit over 12 weeks from 6 April 2020. Setting UK secondary care ENT departments. Participants Adult patients with acute tonsillitis or PTA. Main outcome measures Re‐presentation within 10 days for patients discharged from the ED. Results 83 centres submitted 765 tonsillitis and 416 PTA cases. 54.4% (n = 410) of tonsillitis and 45.3% (187/413) of PTAs were discharged from ED. 9.6% (39/408) of tonsillitis and 10.3% (19/184) of PTA discharges re‐presented within 10 days, compared to 9.7% (33/341) and 10.6% (24/224) for those admitted from ED. The subsequent admission rate of those initially discharged from ED was 4.7% for tonsillitis and 3.3% for PTAs. IV steroids and antibiotics increased the percentage of patients able to swallow from 35.8% to 72.5% for tonsillitis (n = 270/754 and 441/608) and from 22.3% to 71.0% for PTA (n = 92/413 and 265/373). 77.2% of PTAs underwent drainage (n = 319/413), with no significant difference in re‐presentations in those drained vs not‐drained (10.6% vs 9.5%, n = 15/142 vs 4/42, P = .846). Univariable logistic regression showed no significant predictors of re‐presentation within 10 days. Conclusions Management of tonsillitis and PTA changed during the initial peak of the pandemic, shifting towards outpatient care. Some patients who may previously have been admitted to hospital may be safely discharged from the ED.
- Published
- 2021