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Mapa de la situación actual de la atención a la sepsis en los servicios de urgencias españoles

OBJECTIVE: To describe the approach to the patients with suspected sepsis in the Spanish emergency department hospitals (ED) and analyze whether there are differences according to the size of the hospital and the number of visits to the emergency room. METHOD: Structured survey of those responsible...

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Autores principales: Llopis-Roca, Ferrán, Izquierdo, Raúl López, Miro, Oscar, GarcíaLamberechts, Jorge Eric, Jiménez, Agustín Julián, del Castillo, Juan González
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Sociedad Española de Quimioterapia 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8972694/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35103453
http://dx.doi.org/10.37201/req/150.2021
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author Llopis-Roca, Ferrán
Izquierdo, Raúl López
Miro, Oscar
GarcíaLamberechts, Jorge Eric
Jiménez, Agustín Julián
del Castillo, Juan González
author_facet Llopis-Roca, Ferrán
Izquierdo, Raúl López
Miro, Oscar
GarcíaLamberechts, Jorge Eric
Jiménez, Agustín Julián
del Castillo, Juan González
author_sort Llopis-Roca, Ferrán
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To describe the approach to the patients with suspected sepsis in the Spanish emergency department hospitals (ED) and analyze whether there are differences according to the size of the hospital and the number of visits to the emergency room. METHOD: Structured survey of those responsible for the 282 public EDs that serve adults 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. It was asked about assistance and management in the emergency room in the care of patients with suspected sepsis. The results are compared according to hospital size (large ≥ 500 beds vs medium-small <500) and influx to the emergency room (discharge ≥ 200 visits / day vs medium-low <200). RESULTS: A total of 250 Spanish EDs responded (89%). Sepsis protocols are available in 163 (65%) EDs median weekly sepsis treated ranged from 0-5 per week in 39 (71%) ED, 6-10 per week in 10 (18%), 11-15 per week in 4 (7%), and more than 15 activations per week in 3 centers (3.6%). The criteria used for sepsis diagnosis were the qSOFA/SOFA in 105 (63.6%) of the hospitals, SIRS in 6 (3.6%), while in 49 (29.7%) they used both criteria simultaneously. In 79 centers, the sepsis diagnosis was computerized, and in 56 there were tools to help decision-making. 48% (79 of 163) of the EDs had data on bundles compliance. In 61% (99 of 163) of EDs there was training in sepsis and in 56% (55 of 99) it was periodic. Considering the size of the hospital, large hospitals participated more frequently as recipients of patients with sepsis and had an infectious, sepsis and short-stay unit, a microbiologist and infectious disease specialist on duty. CONCLUSION: Most EDs have sepsis protocols, but there is room for improvement. The computerization and development of alerts for diagnosis and treatment still have a long way to go in EDs.
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spelling pubmed-89726942022-04-19 Mapa de la situación actual de la atención a la sepsis en los servicios de urgencias españoles Llopis-Roca, Ferrán Izquierdo, Raúl López Miro, Oscar GarcíaLamberechts, Jorge Eric Jiménez, Agustín Julián del Castillo, Juan González Rev Esp Quimioter Original OBJECTIVE: To describe the approach to the patients with suspected sepsis in the Spanish emergency department hospitals (ED) and analyze whether there are differences according to the size of the hospital and the number of visits to the emergency room. METHOD: Structured survey of those responsible for the 282 public EDs that serve adults 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. It was asked about assistance and management in the emergency room in the care of patients with suspected sepsis. The results are compared according to hospital size (large ≥ 500 beds vs medium-small <500) and influx to the emergency room (discharge ≥ 200 visits / day vs medium-low <200). RESULTS: A total of 250 Spanish EDs responded (89%). Sepsis protocols are available in 163 (65%) EDs median weekly sepsis treated ranged from 0-5 per week in 39 (71%) ED, 6-10 per week in 10 (18%), 11-15 per week in 4 (7%), and more than 15 activations per week in 3 centers (3.6%). The criteria used for sepsis diagnosis were the qSOFA/SOFA in 105 (63.6%) of the hospitals, SIRS in 6 (3.6%), while in 49 (29.7%) they used both criteria simultaneously. In 79 centers, the sepsis diagnosis was computerized, and in 56 there were tools to help decision-making. 48% (79 of 163) of the EDs had data on bundles compliance. In 61% (99 of 163) of EDs there was training in sepsis and in 56% (55 of 99) it was periodic. Considering the size of the hospital, large hospitals participated more frequently as recipients of patients with sepsis and had an infectious, sepsis and short-stay unit, a microbiologist and infectious disease specialist on duty. CONCLUSION: Most EDs have sepsis protocols, but there is room for improvement. The computerization and development of alerts for diagnosis and treatment still have a long way to go in EDs. Sociedad Española de Quimioterapia 2022-02-01 2022 /pmc/articles/PMC8972694/ /pubmed/35103453 http://dx.doi.org/10.37201/req/150.2021 Text en © The Author 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original
Llopis-Roca, Ferrán
Izquierdo, Raúl López
Miro, Oscar
GarcíaLamberechts, Jorge Eric
Jiménez, Agustín Julián
del Castillo, Juan González
Mapa de la situación actual de la atención a la sepsis en los servicios de urgencias españoles
title Mapa de la situación actual de la atención a la sepsis en los servicios de urgencias españoles
title_full Mapa de la situación actual de la atención a la sepsis en los servicios de urgencias españoles
title_fullStr Mapa de la situación actual de la atención a la sepsis en los servicios de urgencias españoles
title_full_unstemmed Mapa de la situación actual de la atención a la sepsis en los servicios de urgencias españoles
title_short Mapa de la situación actual de la atención a la sepsis en los servicios de urgencias españoles
title_sort mapa de la situación actual de la atención a la sepsis en los servicios de urgencias españoles
topic Original
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8972694/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35103453
http://dx.doi.org/10.37201/req/150.2021
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