Safety of Assessment of Patients With Potential Ischemic Chest Pain in an Emergency Department Waiting Room: A Prospective Comparative Cohort Study
Study objective
Emergency department (ED) crowding has been associated with a variety of adverse outcomes. Current guidelines suggest that patients with potentially ischemic chest pain should undergo rapid assessment and treatment in a monitored setting to optimize the diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome. These patients may be at high risk of incorrect diagnosis and adverse events when their evaluation is delayed because of crowding. To mitigate crowding-related delays, we developed processes that enabled emergency physicians to evaluate potentially sick patients in the waiting room when all nurse-staffed stretchers are occupied. The objective of this study was to investigate the safety of waiting room chest pain evaluation.
Methods
This prospective comparative cohort study was conducted in a busy urban, tertiary care ED. Explicit triage and waiting room evaluation processes were introduced. One thousand one hundred seven patients with chest pain of potential cardiac origin were triaged either to a monitored bed or a waiting room chair, depending on bed availability and triage judgment. After diagnostic evaluation, patients were followed for 30 days to identify the proportion of missed cases of acute coronary syndrome (primary outcome) and other prespecified adverse events. Analysis was based on intention to treat.
Results
Eight hundred four patients were triaged to monitored bed and 303 to waiting room evaluation. Initial vital signs were similar, but the waiting room group was younger and had lower rates of some cardiovascular risk factors. The rate of acute coronary syndrome, defined as acute myocardial infarction or objective unstable angina, was 11.7% in the monitored bed group and 7.6% in waiting room patients. There were no missed acute coronary syndrome cases in either the monitored bed group (0%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0% to 0.4%) or the waiting room group (0%; 95% CI 0% to 1.0%). There were 32 adverse events in the monitored bed group (4.0%; 95% CI 2.6% to 5.3%) and 2 in the waiting room group (0.7%; 95% CI 0% to 1.6%).
Conclusion
Our organized approach to triage and waiting room evaluation for stable chest pain patients was safe and efficient. Although waiting room evaluation is not ideal, it may be a feasible contingency strategy for periods when ED crowding compromises access to monitored, nurse-staffed ED beds.
Supervising editor: David L. Schriger, MD, MPH
Author contributions: FXS and JC conceived the study and designed the trial. JC, GI, BB, and EG supervised the conduct of the trial and data collection. BB and EY managed the database. FXS provided statistical analysis and drafted the article. All authors contributed substantially to its revision. FXS takes responsibility for the paper as a whole.
Funding and support: By Annals policy, all authors are required to disclose any and all commercial, financial, and other relationships in any way related to the subject of this article that might create any potential conflict of interest. The authors have stated that no such relationships exist. See the Manuscript Submission Agreement in this issue for examples of specific conflicts covered by this statement.
Publication date: Available online May 23, 2010.
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PII: S0196-0644(10)00350-1
doi:10.1016/j.annemergmed.2010.03.043
© 2010 American College of Emergency Physicians. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
