-Quality of care in intensive care and surgery has benefited from establishing comparative standards. At present there is no accepted tool to compare outcomes for emergency admissions in internal medicine. The Simple Clinical Score (SCS) was used in 1,098 consecutive medical emergency admissions to adjust mortality for severity of illness. Hospital mortality adjusted for severity of illness and length of stay in the cohort was in keeping with mortality in the Irish derivation study with a trend towards lower mortality in the very high-risk group. Three parameters with poor reproducibility were identified. The SCS has several potential applications: identification of patients with low risk of death suitable for early hospital discharge; early identification of patients with a high risk of death, who will require care in critical care areas (or specialist palliative care); and benchmarking of acute medical departments internationally in a similar way to how APACHE II scoring has been used in critical care units worldwide. 1
Objectives: To assess the long term efficacy of and risks associated with computer aided oral anticoagulation for non-rheumatic atrial fibrillation (NRAF) in a district hospital setting. Design: Retrospective, age stratified, event driven clinical database analysis. Setting: District general hospital. Participants: 739 patients receiving warfarin for NRAF between 1996 and 2001. Patients were selected from an anticoagulation database through appropriate filter settings. Main outcome measures: Anticoagulation control (international normalised ratio (INR)) and hospitalisations for bleeding complications, thromboembolic events, and stroke. Results: Over 1484 patient-years, computer assisted anticoagulation was uncontrolled in 38.3% of patients (INR , 2.0 or . 3.0). No significant differences in INR control were observed with respect to patient age (, 65, 65-75, and . 75 years), although to achieve adequate control of anticoagulation, the frequency of testing increased significantly with age. Annual risks of bleeding complications, thromboembolism, and stroke were 0.76%, 0.35%, and 0.84%, respectively. No significant differences in these events were observed between the three age groups studied. Patients who had thromboembolic events and haemorrhagic complications were significantly more likely to have been under-anticoagulated (INR , 2.0) and over-anticoagulated (INR . 3.0), respectively, at the time of their clinical event.Conclusions: Computerised long term oral anticoagulation for NRAF in a community setting of elderly and diverse patients is safe and effective. Anticoagulation control, bleeding events, thromboembolic episodes, and stroke rates are directly comparable with those reported in major clinical trials. The authors therefore support the strategy of rate control with long term oral anticoagulation for NRAF in general clinical practice.
A 62 year old woman admitted with a history suggesting acute myocardial infarction had thrombolytic treatment with anisoylated plasminogen-streptokinase activator complex, which resulted in submucosal haemorrhage in the oesophagus; this caused dissection of the wall of the oesophagus and complete dysphagia. The haematoma resolved spontaneously, leaving behind a diverticulum, with reduced peristalsis and delayed emptying but no obstruction. (Thorax 1992;47:835-836) Thrombolytic treatment is now an established part of treatment for acute myocardial infarction. Serious haemorrhagic sequelae, though rare, are a recognised complication of thrombolytic treatment. We describe a case of submucosal haemorrhage in the oesophagus that followed treatment with anisoylated plasminogen-streptokinase activator complex.
Aims: Review of the clinical outcomes and practical issues of replacing traditional cardiac enzymes with troponin I (cTnI) in a district general hospital. Methods: Crossover study of three sequential three month stages during which serial cardiac enzymes were replaced with a single cTnI measurement available at three set times within 24 hours for the duration of the second three month stage. The study was carried out in a 630 bed district general hospital with 1990 admissions of suspected cardiac ischaemia over the study period as a whole. Account was taken of seasonal factors. Results: The introduction of troponin was associated with 8.5% more patients with non-ischaemic heart disease (IHD) being discharged on the day after admission, saving approximately 107 bed days each year. Approximately 50% more patients were diagnosed with myocardial infarction during the cTnI stage. There was no increase in readmission within one month or early death with cTnI. Approximately 3% false positive and 1.5% false negative cTnI results were recorded. All false positive cTnI results were coding errors or attributable to known assay interference effects. All false negatives were potentially explained by sample timing factors. The lack of standardisation in troponin assay services impacts clinically. Conclusion: Younger patients without IHD were discharged earlier during the cTnI stage in apparent safety. Blood sample timing needs to be verified when cTnI is used as an adjunct to early discharge. There were no unexplained false positives or negatives. Standardisation related issues arose.
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