Breaches of pre-medical emergency team call criteria in an Australian hospital

Daryl Jones, Kartik Kishore, Glenn Eastwood, Stephanie K. Sprogis, Neil J. Glassford

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Objectives and outcomes: To evaluate the 24hrs before medical emergency team (MET) calls to examine: 1) the frequency, nature, and timing of pre-MET criteria breaches; 2) differences in characteristics and outcomes between patients who did and didn't experience pre-MET breaches. Design: Retrospective observational study November 2020–June 2021. Setting: Tertiary referral Australian hospital. Participants: Adults (≥18 years) experiencing MET calls. Results: Breaches in pre-MET criteria occurred prior to 1886/2255 (83.6%) MET calls, and 1038/1281 (81.0%) of the first MET calls. Patients with pre-MET breaches were older (median [IQR] 72 [57–81] vs 66 [56–77] yrs), more likely to be admitted from home (87.8% vs 81.9%) and via the emergency department (73.0% vs 50.2%), but less likely to be for full resuscitation after (67.3% vs 76.5%) the MET. The three most common pre-MET breaches were low SpO2 (48.0%), high pulse rate (39.8%), and low systolic blood pressure (29.0%) which were present for a median (IQR) of 15.4 (7.5–20.8), 13.2 (4.3–21.0), and 12.6 (3.5–20.1) hrs before the MET call, respectively. Patients with pre-MET breaches were more likely to need intensive care admission within 24 h (15.6 vs 11.9%), have repeat MET calls (33.3 vs 24.7%), and die in hospital (15.8 vs 9.9%). Conclusions: Four-fifths of MET calls were preceded by pre-MET criteria breaches, which were present for many hours. Such patients were older, had more limits of treatment, and experienced worse outcomes. There is a need to improve goals of care documentation and pre-MET management of clinical deterioration.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)223-228
Number of pages6
JournalCritical Care and Resuscitation
Volume25
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2023

Keywords

  • Clinical deterioration
  • Deteriorating patient
  • Medical emergency team
  • Pre-MET tier
  • Rapid response system
  • Rapid response team
  • Urgent clinical review

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