1. Physiological deterioration in the Emergency Department: The SNAP40-ED study
- Author
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Matthew J. Reed, Rachel O'Brien, Polly L. Black, Steff Lewis, Hannah Ensor, Matt Wilkes, Christopher McCann, and Stewart Whiting
- Subjects
Ambulatory monitoring ,Monitoring ,physiological ,Patient monitoring ,Clinical deterioration ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Continuous novel ambulatory monitoring may detect deterioration in Emergency Department (ED) patients more rapidly, prompting treatment and preventing adverse events. Single-centre, open-label, prospective, observational cohort study recruiting high/medium acuity (Manchester triage category 2 and 3) participants, aged over 16 years, presenting to ED. Participants were fitted with a novel wearable monitoring device alongside standard clinical care (wired monitoring and/or manual clinical staff vital sign recording) and observed for up to 4 hours in the ED. Primary outcome was time to detection of deterioration. Two-hundred and fifty (250) patients were enrolled. In 82 patients (32.8%) with standard monitoring (wired monitoring and/or manual clinical staff vital sign recording), deterioration in at least one vital sign was noted during their four-hour ED stay. Overall, the novel device detected deterioration a median of 34 minutes earlier than wired monitoring (Q1, Q3 67,194; n=73, mean difference 39.48, p
- Published
- 2021
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