Prevalence of crowding, boarding and staffing levels in Swedish emergency departments - A National Cross Sectional Study

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Abstract

Background: Emergency Department (ED) crowding occurs when demand for care exceeds the available resources. Crowding has been associated with decreased quality of care and increased mortality, but the prevalence on a national level is unknown in most countries. Method: We performed a national, cross-sectional study on staffing levels, staff workload, occupancy rate and patients waiting for an in-hospital bed (boarding) at five time points during 24 h in Swedish EDs. Results: Complete data were collected from 37 (51% of all) EDs in Sweden. High occupancy rate indicated crowding at 12 hospitals (37.5%) at 31 out of 170 (18.2%) time points. Mean workload (measured on a scale from 1, no workload to 6, very high workload) was moderate at 2.65 (±1.25). Boarding was more prevalent in academic EDs than rural EDs (median 3 vs 0). There were an average of 2.6, 4.6 and 3.2 patients per registered nurse, enrolled nurse and physician, respectively. Conclusion: ED crowding based on occupancy rate was prevalent on a national level in Sweden and comparable with international data. Staff workload, boarding and patient to staff ratios were generally lower than previously described.

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Wretborn, J., Wretborn, J., Henricson, J., Henricson, J., Ekelund, U., Wilhelms, D. B., & Wilhelms, D. B. (2020). Prevalence of crowding, boarding and staffing levels in Swedish emergency departments - A National Cross Sectional Study. BMC Emergency Medicine, 20(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12873-020-00342-x

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