Emergency department crowding and hospital transformation during COVID-19, a retrospective, descriptive study of a university hospital in Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract Objectives COVID-19 presents challenges to the emergency care system that could lead to emergency department (ED) crowding. The Huddinge site at the Karolinska university hospital (KH) responded through a rapid transformation of inpatient care capacity together with changing working methods...

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Main Authors: Björn af Ugglas, Niclas Skyttberg, Andreas Wladis, Therese Djärv, Martin J. Holzmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13049-020-00799-6
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spelling doaj-f88f55773c6949df9e56167f9224fc522020-11-25T03:06:10ZengBMCScandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine1757-72412020-10-0128111010.1186/s13049-020-00799-6Emergency department crowding and hospital transformation during COVID-19, a retrospective, descriptive study of a university hospital in Stockholm, SwedenBjörn af Ugglas0Niclas Skyttberg1Andreas Wladis2Therese Djärv3Martin J. Holzmann4Theme of Emergency and Reparative Medicine, Karolinska University HospitalDepartment of Medical Informatics, Karolinska University HospitalDivision of Surgery, Orthopaedics and Oncology, Linköping University HospitalTheme of Emergency and Reparative Medicine, Karolinska University HospitalTheme of Emergency and Reparative Medicine, Karolinska University HospitalAbstract Objectives COVID-19 presents challenges to the emergency care system that could lead to emergency department (ED) crowding. The Huddinge site at the Karolinska university hospital (KH) responded through a rapid transformation of inpatient care capacity together with changing working methods in the ED. The aim is to describe the KH response to the COVID-19 crisis, and how ED crowding, and important input, throughput and output factors for ED crowding developed at KH during a 30-day baseline period followed by the first 60 days of the COVID-19 outbreak in Stockholm Region. Methods Different phases in the development of the crisis were described and identified retrospectively based on major events that changed the conditions for the ED. Results were presented for each phase separately. The outcome ED length of stay (ED LOS) was calculated with mean and 95% confidence intervals. Input, throughput, output and demographic factors were described using distributions, proportions and means. Pearson correlation between ED LOS and emergency ward occupancy by phase was estimated with 95% confidence interval. Results As new working methods were introduced between phase 2 and 3, ED LOS declined from mean (95% CI) 386 (373–399) minutes to 307 (297–317). Imaging proportion was reduced from 29 to 18% and admission rate increased from 34 to 43%. Correlation (95% CI) between emergency ward occupancy and ED LOS by phase was 0.94 (0.55–0.99). Conclusions It is possible to avoid ED crowding, even during extreme and quickly changing conditions by leveraging previously known input, throughput and output factors. One key factor was the change in working methods in the ED with higher competence, less diagnostics and increased focus on rapid clinical admission decisions. Another important factor was the reduction in bed occupancy in emergency wards that enabled a timely admission to inpatient care. A key limitation was the retrospective study design.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13049-020-00799-6Emergency departmentCrowdingCOVID-19Surge capacityBed occupancy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Björn af Ugglas
Niclas Skyttberg
Andreas Wladis
Therese Djärv
Martin J. Holzmann
spellingShingle Björn af Ugglas
Niclas Skyttberg
Andreas Wladis
Therese Djärv
Martin J. Holzmann
Emergency department crowding and hospital transformation during COVID-19, a retrospective, descriptive study of a university hospital in Stockholm, Sweden
Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
Emergency department
Crowding
COVID-19
Surge capacity
Bed occupancy
author_facet Björn af Ugglas
Niclas Skyttberg
Andreas Wladis
Therese Djärv
Martin J. Holzmann
author_sort Björn af Ugglas
title Emergency department crowding and hospital transformation during COVID-19, a retrospective, descriptive study of a university hospital in Stockholm, Sweden
title_short Emergency department crowding and hospital transformation during COVID-19, a retrospective, descriptive study of a university hospital in Stockholm, Sweden
title_full Emergency department crowding and hospital transformation during COVID-19, a retrospective, descriptive study of a university hospital in Stockholm, Sweden
title_fullStr Emergency department crowding and hospital transformation during COVID-19, a retrospective, descriptive study of a university hospital in Stockholm, Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Emergency department crowding and hospital transformation during COVID-19, a retrospective, descriptive study of a university hospital in Stockholm, Sweden
title_sort emergency department crowding and hospital transformation during covid-19, a retrospective, descriptive study of a university hospital in stockholm, sweden
publisher BMC
series Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
issn 1757-7241
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Objectives COVID-19 presents challenges to the emergency care system that could lead to emergency department (ED) crowding. The Huddinge site at the Karolinska university hospital (KH) responded through a rapid transformation of inpatient care capacity together with changing working methods in the ED. The aim is to describe the KH response to the COVID-19 crisis, and how ED crowding, and important input, throughput and output factors for ED crowding developed at KH during a 30-day baseline period followed by the first 60 days of the COVID-19 outbreak in Stockholm Region. Methods Different phases in the development of the crisis were described and identified retrospectively based on major events that changed the conditions for the ED. Results were presented for each phase separately. The outcome ED length of stay (ED LOS) was calculated with mean and 95% confidence intervals. Input, throughput, output and demographic factors were described using distributions, proportions and means. Pearson correlation between ED LOS and emergency ward occupancy by phase was estimated with 95% confidence interval. Results As new working methods were introduced between phase 2 and 3, ED LOS declined from mean (95% CI) 386 (373–399) minutes to 307 (297–317). Imaging proportion was reduced from 29 to 18% and admission rate increased from 34 to 43%. Correlation (95% CI) between emergency ward occupancy and ED LOS by phase was 0.94 (0.55–0.99). Conclusions It is possible to avoid ED crowding, even during extreme and quickly changing conditions by leveraging previously known input, throughput and output factors. One key factor was the change in working methods in the ED with higher competence, less diagnostics and increased focus on rapid clinical admission decisions. Another important factor was the reduction in bed occupancy in emergency wards that enabled a timely admission to inpatient care. A key limitation was the retrospective study design.
topic Emergency department
Crowding
COVID-19
Surge capacity
Bed occupancy
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13049-020-00799-6
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