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"Cause of death"

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Critical Care

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In-hospital mortality in the emergency department: clinical and etiological differences between early and late deaths among patients awaiting admission
Clin Exp Emerg Med. 2021;8(4):325-332.   Published online December 31, 2021
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In-hospital mortality in the emergency department: clinical and etiological differences between early and late deaths among patients awaiting admission
Clin Exp Emerg Med. 2021;8(4):325-332.   Published online December 31, 2021
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Objective
Given that there are no studies on diseases that occur by waiting for hospitalization, we aimed to evaluate the main causes of death in the emergency room (ER) and their relationship with overcrowding.
Methods
Patients who died in the ER in the past 2 years (pediatrics and trauma victims excluded) were divided into two groups: patients who died within 6 hours of arrival (emergency department [ED] group) and patients who died later (LD group). We compared the causes of death, total vital signs, diagnostic tests performed, and therapy between the groups. We assessed for possible correlation between the number of monthly deaths per group and four variables of overcrowding: number of patients treated per month, waiting time before medical visit (W-Time), mean intervention time (I-Time), and number of patients admitted to the ward per month (NPA).
Results
During the two years, 175 patients had died in our ER (52% in ED group and 48% in LD group). The total time spent in the ER was, respectively, 2.9±0.2 hours for ED group and 17.9± 1.5 hours for LD group. The more frequent cause of death was cardiovascular syndrome (30%) in ED group and sepsis (27%) and acute respiratory failure (27%) in LD group. Positive correlations between number of monthly deaths and W-Time (R2 0.51, P<0.001), I-Time (R2 0.73, P< 0.0001), and NPA (R2 0.37, P<0.01) were found only in LD group.
Conclusion
Patients with sepsis and acute respiratory failure die after a long stay in the ER, and the risk increases with overcrowding. A fast-track pathway should be considered for hospital admission of critical patients.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  Crossref logo
  • Non-Surgical Causes of Death in the Emergency Department: A Five-Year Monocentric Clinicopathological Study
    Adrian-Iosif Moldoveanu, Diana Maria Orzata, Gabriel Veniamin Cozma, Radu Gheorghe Dan, Ovidiu Alexandru Mederle, Flavia Zara
    Medicina.2026; 62(2): 293.     CrossRef
  • Using space technology approach to improve quality in emergency departments in India: a quality improvement program
    Saravana Kumar, Gunaseelan Vikneswaran, Jitendra Suryavamshi, Srinath Kumar, Manzoor Shaik, G K Reshma, M R Suresh, Alben Sigamani, V C Shanmuganandan, Alexander Thomas, A N Venkatesh, Imron Subhan, M Rajadurai, Sateesh Kumar Kailasam, B Nivetha, K U Sham
    International Journal for Quality In Health Care.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and short-term mortality risk in elderly acute medical patients admitted to a University Hospital Emergency Department
    Gioacchino Galardo, Luca Crisanti, Andrea Gentile, Marco Cornacchia, Francesca Iatomasi, Iacopo Egiddi, Emanuele Puscio, Danilo Menichelli, Francesco Pugliese, Daniele Pastori
    Internal and Emergency Medicine.2025; 20(2): 553.     CrossRef
  • Diagnostic performance of S100B assay for intracranial hemorrhage detection in patients with mild traumatic brain injury under antiplatelet or anticoagulant therapy
    Paul-André Poislane, Mathilde Papin, Damien Masson, Nicolas Goffinet, Arthur David, Quentin Le Bastard, Hugo De Carvalho
    Scientific Reports.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Invited Editorial: Waiting Room Care is Not the Solution to Emergency Department Boarding
    Andrew J. Bouland, Juan A. March
    JACEP Open.2025; 6(3): 100161.     CrossRef
  • Shortening emergency department length of stay: Fast track, short-stay unit and acute medical unit
    Bei Huang
    Exploratory Research in Clinical and Social Pharmacy.2025; 19: 100626.     CrossRef
  • Multidisciplinary Staff Experiences of Providing End-of-Life Care in an Acute Hospital Setting
    Mia Werrett, Joanna McIlveen, Mim Fox
    Hospitals.2025; 2(3): 15.     CrossRef
  • OrthoMortPred: Predicting one-year mortality following orthopedic hospitalization
    Filipe Ricardo Carvalho, Paulo Jorge Gavaia, António Brito Camacho
    International Journal of Medical Informatics.2024; 192: 105657.     CrossRef
  • Comment on: "30 days mortality prognostic value of POCT bio-adrenomedullin and proenkephalin in patients with sepsis in the emergency department"
    Gabriele VALLI, Francesca DE MARCO, Silvia CASALBONI, Maria P. RUGGIERI
    Italian Journal of Emergency Medicine.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Can Acute Care Biomarkers Change Patient’s Management in Sepsis?
    Salvatore Di Somma, Luca Crisanti
    Eurasian Journal of Emergency Medicine.2022; 21(2): 79.     CrossRef
  • Characteristics and timing of mortality in children dying in pediatric intensive care: a 5-year experience
    Edin Botan, Emrah Gün, Emine Kübra Şden, Cansu Yöndem, Anar Gurbanov, Burak Balaban, Fevzi Kahveci, Hasan Özen, Hacer Uçmak, Ali Genco Gençay, Tanil Kendirli
    Acute and Critical Care.2022; 37(4): 644.     CrossRef
  • 30 Days Mortality Prognostic Value of POCT Bio-Adrenomedullin and Proenkephalin in Patients with Sepsis in the Emergency Department
    Silvia Casalboni, Gabriele Valli, Ferdinando Terlizzi, Marina Mastracchi, Giacomo Fidelio, Francesca De Marco, Caterina Bernardi, Anastasia Chieruzzi, Alessia Curcio, Francesco De Cicco, Nicola Colella, Ilaria Dafne Papasidero, Emanuele Tartarone, Maria P
    Medicina.2022; 58(12): 1786.     CrossRef
  • Impact of the 24-hour time target policy for emergency departments in South Korea: a mixed method study in a single medical center
    Sookyung Park, Hansol Chang, Weon Jung, Se Uk Lee, Sung Yeon Hwang, Hee Yoon, Won Chul Cha, Tae Gun Shin, Min Seob Sim, Ik Joon Jo, Taerim Kim
    BMC Health Services Research.2022;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Utility of Measuring Circulating Bio-Adrenomedullin and Proenkephalin for 30-Day Mortality Risk Prediction in Patients with COVID-19 and Non-COVID-19 Interstitial Pneumonia in the Emergency Department
    Ilaria Dafne Papasidero, Gabriele Valli, Dario Marin, Alberto Del Sasso, Antonio De Magistris, Elisa Cennamo, Silvia Casalboni, Francesca De Marco, Roberta Rocchi, Brice Ndogmo Beumo, Valeria Cusani, Mariarosa Gaudio, Oliver Hartmann, Andreas Bergman, Mar
    Medicina.2022; 58(12): 1852.     CrossRef
  • Usefulness of High-Sensitivity Troponin I in Risk Stratification and Final Disposition of Patients with Acute Heart Failure in the Emergency Department: Comparison between HFpEF vs. HFrEF
    Luca Crisanti, Gabriele Valli, Elisa Cennamo, Alessandro Capolino, Paolo Fratini, Claudio Cesaro, Gloria Adducchio, Antonio De Magistris, Ferdinando Terlizzi, Maria Pia Ruggieri, Enrico Mirante, Claudio Savoriti, Kalyarat Sukruang, Valentina Valeriano, Fr
    Medicina.2022; 59(1): 7.     CrossRef
  • 10,202 View
  • 213 Download
  • 14 Web of Science
  • 15 Crossref

Emergency Medicine Practice and Administration

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Concordance between the underlying causes of death on death certificates written by three emergency physicians
Clin Exp Emerg Med. 2019;6(3):218-225.   Published online September 30, 2019
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Concordance between the underlying causes of death on death certificates written by three emergency physicians
Clin Exp Emerg Med. 2019;6(3):218-225.   Published online September 30, 2019
Close
Objective
This study was conducted to evaluate the concordance between the underlying causes of death (UCOD) on the death certificates written by three emergency physicians (EPs). We investigated errors on the death certificates committed by each EP.
Methods
This study included 106 patients issued a death certificate in the emergency department of an academic hospital. Three EPs reviewed the medical records retrospectively and completed 106 death certificates independently. The selection of the UCOD on the death certificates by each EP (EP-UCOD) was based on the general principle or selection rules. The gold standard UCOD (GS-UCOD) was determined for each patient by unanimous consent between three EPs. We also compared between the EP-UCOD and the GS-UCOD. In addition, we compared between UCODs of three EPs. The errors on the death certificates were investigated by each EP.
Results
The rates of concordance between EP-UCOD and the GS-UCOD were 86%, 81%, and 67% for EP-A, EP-B, and EP-C, respectively. The concordance rates between EP-A and EP-B were the highest overall percent agreement (0.783), and those between EP-A and EP-C were the lowest overall percent agreement (0.651). Although each EP had differences in the errors they committed, none of them listed the mode of dying as UCOD.
Conclusion
This study confirmed that each EP wrote death certificates indicating different causes of death for the same decedents; however, the three EPs made fewer errors on the patients’ death certificates compared with those reported in previous studies.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  Crossref logo
  • Do Death Certificate Errors Decrease as Clinical Experience in an Emergency Department Increases?
    Jung Jun Kim, Sun Hyu Kim, Sangyup Chung, Byeong Ju Park, Soobeom Park, Song Yi Park
    Journal of Korean Medical Science.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Causes of death in children with congenital anomalies up to age 10 in eight European countries
    Anke Rissmann, Joachim Tan, Svetlana V Glinianaia, Judith Rankin, Anna Pierini, Michele Santoro, Alessio Coi, Ester Garne, Maria Loane, Joanne Given, Abigail Reid, Amaia Aizpurua, Diana Akhmedzhanova, Elisa Ballardini, Ingeborg Barisic, Clara Cavero-Carbo
    BMJ Paediatrics Open.2023; 7(1): e001617.     CrossRef
  • Factors Associated with Major Errors on Death Certificates
    Sangyup Chung, Sun-Hyu Kim, Byeong-Ju Park, Soobeom Park
    Healthcare.2022; 10(4): 726.     CrossRef
  • Errors in pediatric death certificates issued in an emergency department
    Byeong Ju Park, Sun Hyu Kim
    Pediatric Emergency Medicine Journal.2022; 9(1): 17.     CrossRef
  • 8,202 View
  • 131 Download
  • 3 Web of Science
  • 4 Crossref