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No age thresholds in the emergency department: A retrospective cohort study on age differences

Emergency care in elderly patients has gained attention by researchers due to high utilization rate and the importance of emergency services in elderly care. We examine if there is a clear age threshold between young and old patients at which there is a need for extra care and facilities in the emer...

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Autores principales: Fuchs, Caro, Çelik, Bilge, Brouns, Steffie H. A., Kaymak, Uzay, Haak, Harm R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6353140/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30699209
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210743
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author Fuchs, Caro
Çelik, Bilge
Brouns, Steffie H. A.
Kaymak, Uzay
Haak, Harm R.
author_facet Fuchs, Caro
Çelik, Bilge
Brouns, Steffie H. A.
Kaymak, Uzay
Haak, Harm R.
author_sort Fuchs, Caro
collection PubMed
description Emergency care in elderly patients has gained attention by researchers due to high utilization rate and the importance of emergency services in elderly care. We examine if there is a clear age threshold between young and old patients at which there is a need for extra care and facilities in the emergency department. This retrospective cohort study uses emergency department (ED) data collected over the course of a year, containing information about 31,491 patient visits. The measured variables are treatment time, waiting time, number of tests, number of medical procedures, number of specialties involved and the patient’s length of stay on the ED. To examine the multivariate differences between different patient groups, the data set is split into eighteen age groups and a MANOVA analysis is conducted to compare group means. The results show that older patients tend to have a longer stay on the ED. They also require more medical tests, have higher resource utilization and admission rates to the hospital. When the patients are grouped according to life stages (<18, 18-39, 40-64 and ≥65), each life stage shows significantly different characteristics across all variables. To understand where these differences start, age bins of five years are analyzed and almost none of the consecutive groups are significantly different in any variable. A significant difference between all groups is observed when age interval of the bins is increased to 10 years. This indicates that although age has an effect on the patient’s treatment, a clear age threshold that identifies the group of elderly patients is not observable from emergency room variables. The results of this study show no clear age boundary between young and old patients. In other words, we could not find support for favoring the often-used age boundary of 65 over other boundaries (e.g. 60 or 70) to distinguish the group of elderly patients on the ED.
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spelling pubmed-63531402019-02-15 No age thresholds in the emergency department: A retrospective cohort study on age differences Fuchs, Caro Çelik, Bilge Brouns, Steffie H. A. Kaymak, Uzay Haak, Harm R. PLoS One Research Article Emergency care in elderly patients has gained attention by researchers due to high utilization rate and the importance of emergency services in elderly care. We examine if there is a clear age threshold between young and old patients at which there is a need for extra care and facilities in the emergency department. This retrospective cohort study uses emergency department (ED) data collected over the course of a year, containing information about 31,491 patient visits. The measured variables are treatment time, waiting time, number of tests, number of medical procedures, number of specialties involved and the patient’s length of stay on the ED. To examine the multivariate differences between different patient groups, the data set is split into eighteen age groups and a MANOVA analysis is conducted to compare group means. The results show that older patients tend to have a longer stay on the ED. They also require more medical tests, have higher resource utilization and admission rates to the hospital. When the patients are grouped according to life stages (<18, 18-39, 40-64 and ≥65), each life stage shows significantly different characteristics across all variables. To understand where these differences start, age bins of five years are analyzed and almost none of the consecutive groups are significantly different in any variable. A significant difference between all groups is observed when age interval of the bins is increased to 10 years. This indicates that although age has an effect on the patient’s treatment, a clear age threshold that identifies the group of elderly patients is not observable from emergency room variables. The results of this study show no clear age boundary between young and old patients. In other words, we could not find support for favoring the often-used age boundary of 65 over other boundaries (e.g. 60 or 70) to distinguish the group of elderly patients on the ED. Public Library of Science 2019-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC6353140/ /pubmed/30699209 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210743 Text en © 2019 Fuchs et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fuchs, Caro
Çelik, Bilge
Brouns, Steffie H. A.
Kaymak, Uzay
Haak, Harm R.
No age thresholds in the emergency department: A retrospective cohort study on age differences
title No age thresholds in the emergency department: A retrospective cohort study on age differences
title_full No age thresholds in the emergency department: A retrospective cohort study on age differences
title_fullStr No age thresholds in the emergency department: A retrospective cohort study on age differences
title_full_unstemmed No age thresholds in the emergency department: A retrospective cohort study on age differences
title_short No age thresholds in the emergency department: A retrospective cohort study on age differences
title_sort no age thresholds in the emergency department: a retrospective cohort study on age differences
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6353140/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30699209
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210743
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