• No results found

Utilization of Emergency Care – A Retrospective Study at the University of Szeged, Hungary

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2020

Share "Utilization of Emergency Care – A Retrospective Study at the University of Szeged, Hungary"

Copied!
11
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

Loading

Figure

Table 1. The ten most frequent diseases which served as a principal diagnosis necessitating admission to medical care and transfer to another health care unit, and complications in the sample
Table 2. Sample distribution according to the 5 most frequent diseases that served as a basis for the principal diagnosis necessitating admission to medical care (I) and transfer to  another health care unit (II), and complications (III) in men by age groups
Table 3. Sample distribution according to the 5 most frequent diseases that served as a basis for the principal diagnoses necessitating admission to medical care (I) and transfer to another health care unit (II), and complications (III) in women by age group

References

Related documents

Specific areas of focus include reducing waits for inpatient admission through emergency departments, achieving timely and efficient transfer of patients from the intensive care

Most emergency medical care physicians reported a need for more knowledge and better procedures related to both pain evaluation and pain treatment in children and youth.. The

Among these 229 patients who ful- filled the criteria for EDOU admission, eight patients (five in observation unit and three in the general ward) discharged against medical

Calls for emergency medical care of palliative patients in the final stage of their disease are not uncommon in Ger- many and occur at a rate similar to that for emergencies in

One quarter of patients were discharged on a Friday or weekend, one quarter of readmissions occurred on a weekend, and pain was the most common reason for readmission raising

Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; ICU, intensive care unit; MICU, medical intensive care unit; CCU, coronary care unit; SICU, surgical intensive care

The medical records of the included patients were subsequently screened (by FJL and ARHvZ) for the following exclusion criteria: sepsis not the primary reason for ICU

Discharge status: specialised critical care transfer: Transferred from critical care unit for tertiary specialist critical care provision; Discharge status: early, critical care