“… our results provide a worrisome view of the quality of care of septic patients in U.S. EDs.”
Crikey.
This is serious business. Tell me more.
“Our data suggest that many emergency department patients (31%) with sepsis do not receive antibiotics until they arrive on the inpatient unit.”
This is somewhat concerning data. Of course, some patients can have sepsis from viremia, and would not warrant antibiotics – but, I think most admitted patients with SIRS and a suspected infectious source ought to receive treatment.
But, unfortunately, for this study, the question is less the quality of ED care, and more the quality of the data source. The National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey is a lovely data set, whose quality is only increasing as coding and structured data become more prevalent – but a retrospective analysis of these data is not appropriate substrate to make sweeping generalizations regarding the care in the Emergency Department.
From the ~400 Emergency Departments providing yearly data to NHAMCS, 0.32% of patients met their definition of sepsis. That meant these data reflect a sample of 1,141 patients, and the admitted limitation of “studies relying on NHAMCS data are vulnerable to errors of omission in data collection.” These authors lack information regarding previously administered antibiotics from transferred patients, and admit some patients – those spending <1 hour in the ED – may simply have left the ED before antibiotic administration could be completed.
Quite simply, it’s (mostly) garbage in and (mostly) garbage out.
The authors also attempt an assessment of antibiotic appropriateness from this retrospective chart abstraction. It is so egregiously flawed it doesn’t even warrant comment.
“Sepsis Visits and Antibiotic Utilization in U.S. Emergency Departments”
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24201179