Importance: There are more than 140 million annual visits to emergency departments (EDs) in the US. The role of EDs in providing care at or near the end of life is not well characterized. Objective: To determine the frequency of death in the ED or within 1 month of an ED visit in an all-age, all-payer national database. Design, Setting, and Participants: The retrospective cohort study used patient-level data from the nationally representative Optum clinical electronic health record data set for 2010 to 2020. Data were analyzed from January to March 2022. Exposures: Age, Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), and year of ED encounter. Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was death in the ED, overall and stratified by age, CCI, or year. A key secondary outcome was death within 1 month of an ED encounter. We extrapolated to make national estimates using US Census and Nationwide Emergency Department Sample data. Results: Among a total of 104113518 individual patients with 96239939 ED encounters, 205372 ED deaths were identified in Optum, for whom median (IQR) age was 72 (53 to >80) years, 114582 (55.8%) were male, and 152672 (74.3%) were White. ED death affected 0.20% of overall patients and accounted for 0.21% of ED encounters. An additional 603273 patients died within 1 month of an ED encounter. Extrapolated nationally, ED deaths accounted for 11.3% of total deaths from 2010 to 2019, and 33.2% of all decedents nationally visited the ED within 1 month of their death. The proportion of total national deaths occurring in the ED decreased by 0.27% annually (P for trend =.003) but the proportion who died within 1 month of an ED visit increased by 1.2% annually (P for trend
CITATION STYLE
Elmer, J., Mikati, N., Arnold, R. M., Wallace, D. J., & Callaway, C. W. (2022). Death and End-of-Life Care in Emergency Departments in the US. JAMA Network Open, 5(11), E2240399. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.40399
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