Increasing the Number of Medical Emergency Calls Does Not Improve Hospital Mortality
journals.lww.com
With adjustment for patient factors, illness, and comorbidities, increased emergency calling rates were not associated with reduced in-hospital mortality. Efforts to increase calling rates do not seem warranted. We studied 441,029 patients from St Vincent’s Hospital Melbourne. Median age was 61.0 years (interquartile range, 45–74 yr), 57.2% were men, and 0.70% died; monthly emergency calling rates varied between 9.21 and 30.69 (median 18.4) per 1,000 discharges. In-hospital mortality adjusted for age, gender, emergency status, same day admission, year of discharge, and Charlson Comorbidity Index was not reduced by higher calling rates in the month of discharge.