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International perspectives on emergency department crowding.

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TLDR
In this article, the authors describe emergency care systems and the extent of crowding across 15 countries outside of the United States: Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Iran, Italy, The Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Catalonia (Spain), Sweden, and the United Kingdom.
Abstract
The maturation of emergency medicine (EM) as a specialty has coincided with dramatic increases in emergency department (ED) visit rates, both in the United States and around the world ED crowding has become a public health problem where periodic supply and demand mismatches in ED and hospital resources cause long waiting times and delays in critical treatments ED crowding has been associated with several negative clinical outcomes, including higher complication rates and mortality This article describes emergency care systems and the extent of crowding across 15 countries outside of the United States: Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Iran, Italy, The Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Catalonia (Spain), Sweden, and the United Kingdom The authors are local emergency care leaders with knowledge of emergency care in their particular countries Where available, data are provided about visit patterns in each country; however, for many of these countries, no national data are available on ED visits rates or crowding For most of the countries included, there is both objective evidence of increases in ED visit rates and ED crowding and also subjective assessments of trends toward higher crowding in the ED ED crowding appears to be worsening in many countries despite the presence of universal health coverage Scandinavian countries with robust systems to manage acute care outside the ED do not report crowding is a major problem The main cause for crowding identified by many authors is the boarding of admitted patients, similar to the United States Many hospitals in these countries have implemented operational interventions to mitigate crowding in the ED, and some countries have imposed strict limits on ED length of stay (LOS), while others have no clear plan to mitigate crowding An understanding of the causes and potential solutions implemented in these countries can provide a lens into how to mitigate ED crowding in the United States through health policy interventions and hospital operational changes

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Emergency Department Crowding on Outcomes of Admitted Patients

TL;DR: periods of high ED crowding were associated with increased inpatient mortality and modest increases in length of stay and costs for admitted patients, and those days within the top quartile of diversion hours for a specific facility.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between emergency department crowding and patient outcomes: a systematic review.

TL;DR: A systematic review of studies published in the past decade that pertained to emergency department crowding and the following patient outcome measures found that ED crowding is associated with higher rates of patients leaving the ED without being seen.
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Overcrowding in emergency department: an international issue

TL;DR: This manuscript represents a synopsis of the lectures on overcrowding problems in the ED of the Third Italian GREAT Network Congress, held in Rome, 15–19 October 2012, and hopefully, they may provide valuable contributions in the understanding of ED crowding solutions.
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Models and Insights for Hospital Inpatient Operations: Time-Dependent ED Boarding Time

TL;DR: The model predicts that implementing a hypothetical policy can eliminate excessive waiting for those patients who request beds in mornings, and is able to capture the inpatient flow dynamics at hourly resolution and can evaluate the impact of operational policies on both the daily and time-of-day waiting time performance.
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Debriefing in the Emergency Department After Clinical Events: A Practical Guide

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the current evidence supporting post-event debriefing and discuss practical approaches to implement debrief in the emergency department and provide a practical guide for the clinician.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The association between hospital overcrowding and mortality among patients admitted via Western Australian emergency departments

TL;DR: The relationship between hospital and emergency department occupancy, as indicators of hospital overcrowding, and mortality after emergency admission, is examined to examine the relationship between hospitals overcrowding and ED occupancy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Increase in patient mortality at 10 days associated with emergency department overcrowding.

TL;DR: To quantify any relationship between emergency department overcrowding and 10‐day patient mortality, a large-scale study of accident and emergency departments in the Netherlands found no relationship.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emergency Department Crowding Is Associated With Poor Care for Patients With Severe Pain

TL;DR: ED crowding is associated with poor quality of care in patients with severe pain, with respect to total lack of treatment and delay until treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Primary care and health system performance: adults' experiences in five countries.

TL;DR: The survey finds shortfalls in delivery of safe, effective, timely, or patient-centered care, with variations among countries, and contrasts across countries point to the potential to improve performance and to learn from international initiatives.
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