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“Chest pain—please admit”: is there an alternative?: A rapid cardiological assessment service may prevent unnecessary admissions

Simon Capewell, +1 more
- 08 Apr 2000 - 
- Vol. 320, Iss: 7240, pp 951-952
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TLDR
Any scheme which safely avoided these unnecessary admissions might save resources, reduce stress for patients, and, crucially, reduce the worrying false negatives—those missed cases of high risk coronary heart disease.
Abstract
Emergency medical admissions are important. They continue to rise year after year; consume substantial NHS resources; disrupt other NHS activities; and generate winter bed crises.1 2 Patients with acute central chest pain account for 20-30% of emergency medical admissions.3 4 Most are admitted because of concern about unstable coronary heart disease. Yet fewer than half will have a final diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction or unstable angina.4 Patients without high risk coronary heart disease thus account for over half those presenting with chest pain and over 10% of all emergency medical admissions. Such patients could be safely managed without admission, and most would prefer it. The current system is therefore both ineffective and inefficient. Any scheme which safely avoided these unnecessary admissions might save resources, reduce stress for patients, and, crucially, reduce the worrying false negatives—those missed cases of high risk coronary heart disease. …

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Randomised controlled trial and economic evaluation of a chest pain observation unit compared with routine care

TL;DR: Care in a chest pain observation unit seems to be more effective and more cost effective than routine care for patients with acute, undifferentiated chest pain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychological interventions for symptomatic management of non‐specific chest pain in patients with normal coronary anatomy

TL;DR: This Cochrane review suggests a modest to moderate benefit for psychological interventions, particularly those using a cognitive-behavioural framework, which was largely restricted to the first three months after the intervention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cause and outcome of atypical chest pain in patients admitted to hospital.

TL;DR: A group of patients admitted over five weeks with chest pain suspected of being cardiac in origin were studied to see how far causation was pursued and how their mortality compared with that of patients with a proven cardiac cause for their symptoms.
Journal ArticleDOI

A prospective, observational study of a chest pain observation unit in a British hospital

TL;DR: The chest pain observation unit is a practical alternative to routine care for acute chest pain in the United Kingdom and effectively rules out immediate, serious morbidity, but not longer term morbidity and mortality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chest pain in focal musculoskeletal disorders.

TL;DR: The most commonly encountered syndromes of focal musculoskeletal disorders in clinical practice are summarized.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence, clinical characteristics, and short-term prognosis of angina pectoris.

TL;DR: Incidence of new cases of angina pectoris in the United Kingdom is conservatively estimated from this study to be 22,600 patients per annum, with one in 10 patients experiencing a non-fatal myocardial infarction or coronary death within a year of presentation the prognosis ofAngina is not benign.
Journal Article

Emergency medical admissions in Glasgow: general practices vary despite adjustment for age, sex, and deprivation.

TL;DR: Emergency medical admission rates are higher among the elderly, males, and deprived populations, which has implications for equitable resource distribution in the National Health Service.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selecting the best triage rule for patients hospitalized with chest pain

TL;DR: The results show that application of a triage rule 24 hours after admission may have the potential to shorten length of stay in the CCU and intermediate care unit without significantly compromising patient care, and the failure of the admission triages to improve bed utilization illustrates the potential hazards of ignoring patient complications, interventions, and co-morbidity when predicting the efficacy of a Triage rule.
Journal ArticleDOI

A 'same day' direct-access chest pain clinic : Improved management and reduced hospitalization

TL;DR: The Chest Pain Clinic service has a higher diagnostic yield for ischaemic heart disease than open access exercise electrocardiography, provides the General Practitioner with a firm clinical diagnosis in over 90% of cases, and identifies those patients requiring further treatment and invasive investigation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emergency medical admissions: taking stock and planning for winter.

Oliver Blatchford, +1 more
- 22 Nov 1997 - 
TL;DR: Emergency medical admissions have risen by 50% since 1984 and now account for almost half of all NHS admissions, and this continuing rise threatens the future of the NHS.
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