Article

Multimorbidity and adverse outcomes following emergency department attendance: population based cohort study

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Citation

Blayney MC, Reed MJ, Masterson JA, Anand A, Bouamrane MM, Fleuriot J, Luz S, Lyall MJ, Mercer S, Mills NL, Shenkin SD, Walsh TS, Wild SH, Wu H, McLachlan S, Guthrie B & Lone NI (2024) Multimorbidity and adverse outcomes following emergency department attendance: population based cohort study. BMJ Medicine, 3 (1), p. e000731. https://bmjmedicine.bmj.com/content/3/1/e000731.full; https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjmed-2023-000731

Abstract
Objectives: To describe the effect of multimorbidity on adverse patient centred outcomes in people attending emergency department. Design: Population based cohort study. Setting: Emergency departments in NHS Lothian in Scotland, from 1 January 2012 to 31 December 2019. Participants: Adults (≥18 years) attending emergency departments. Data sources: Linked data from emergency departments, hospital discharges, and cancer registries, and national mortality data. Main outcome measures: Multimorbidity was defined as at least two conditions from the Elixhauser comorbidity index. Multivariable logistic or linear regression was used to assess associations of multimorbidity with 30 day mortality (primary outcome), hospital admission, re-attendance at the emergency department within seven days, and time spent in emergency department (secondary outcomes). Primary analysis was stratified by age (<65 v ≥65 years). Results: 451 291 people had 1 273 937 attendances to emergency departments during the study period. 43 504 (9.6%) had multimorbidity, and people with multimorbidity were older (median 73 v 43 years), more likely to arrive by emergency ambulance (57.8% v 23.7%), and more likely to be triaged as very urgent (23.5% v 9.2%) than people who do not have multimorbidity. After adjusting for other prognostic covariates, multimorbidity, compared with no multimorbidity, was associated with higher 30 day mortality (8.2% v 1.2%, adjusted odds ratio 1.81 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.72 to 1.91)), higher rate of hospital admission (60.1% v 20.5%, 1.81 (1.76 to 1.86)), higher reattendance to an emergency department within seven days (7.8% v 3.5%, 1.41 (1.32 to 1.50)), and longer time spent in the department (adjusted coefficient 0.27 h (95% CI 0.26 to 0.27)). The size of associations between multimorbidity and all outcomes were larger in younger patients: for example, the adjusted odds ratio of 30 day mortality was 3.03 (95% CI 2.68 to 3.42) in people younger than 65 years versus 1.61 (95% CI 1.53 to 1.71) in those 65 years or older. Conclusions: Almost one in ten patients presenting to emergency department had multimorbidity using Elixhauser index conditions. Multimorbidity was strongly associated with adverse outcomes and these associations were stronger in younger people. The increasing prevalence of multimorbidity in the population is likely to exacerbate strain on emergency departments unless practice and policy evolve to meet the growing demand.

Keywords
Multimorbidity, adverse outcomes, adverse events, postoperative complications, emergency care, Multivariable logistic regression

Journal
BMJ Medicine: Volume 3, Issue 1

StatusPublished
FundersThe Wellcome Trust and NHS Lothian
Publication date31/08/2024
Publication date online17/08/2024
Date accepted by journal22/05/2024
PublisherBMJ
Publisher URLhttps://bmjmedicine.bmj.com/content/3/1/e000731.full
ISSN2754-0413

People (1)

Professor Matt-Mouley Bouamrane

Professor Matt-Mouley Bouamrane

Professor in Health/Social Informatics, Computing Science

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