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The variable relationship between the National Early Warning Score on admission to hospital, the primary discharge diagnosis and in-hospital mortality Authors information

Holland, Mark; Kellett, John; Watson, Matthew; Al Moubayed, Noura

The variable relationship between the National Early Warning Score on admission to hospital, the primary discharge diagnosis and in-hospital mortality Authors information Thumbnail


Authors

Mark Holland

John Kellett



Abstract

Background: Patients with an elevated admission National Early Warning Score (NEWS) are more likely to die while in hospital. However, it is not known if this increased mortality risk is the same for all diagnoses. The aim of this study was to determine and compare the increased risk of in-hospital mortality associated with an elevated NEWS and different primary discharge diagnoses in unselected emergency admissions to a UK university teaching hospital.

Methods: A non-interventional observational study of 122,321 consecutive, unselected, adult patients with complete data admitted as an emergency between 2014-2022.

Results: The overall in-hospital mortality was 4.3%. Eighty diagnostic groupings accounted for 85.8% of all admissions and 89.4% of all in-hospital deaths. Depending on diagnostic grouping, the risk of mortality associated with an admission NEWS ≥3 ranged from 2.3 to 100-fold. For example, the in-hospital mortality of COPD patients increased from 1.9% for those with admission NEWS <3 to 35.6% for those with NEWS ≥3, for chest pain mortality increased from 0.1% to 3.9%, and for patients with an opiate overdose from 0.2% to 7.7%. Conversely, for admission NEWS <3, aspiration pneumonia and intracranial haemorrhage had in-hospital mortalities of 13.7%, 12.1%, respectively.

Discussion: There is enormous variation in the mortality risk associated with an increased admission NEWS in different commonly encountered diagnoses. Therefore, the mortality risk of some ‘low risk’ conditions can be dramatically increased if their admission NEWS is elevated, whereas some ‘high risk’ conditions are still likely to die even if their admission NEWS is low.

Citation

Holland, M., Kellett, J., Boulitsakis-Logothetis, S., Watson, M., Al Moubayed, N., & Green, D. (online). The variable relationship between the National Early Warning Score on admission to hospital, the primary discharge diagnosis and in-hospital mortality Authors information. Internal and Emergency Medicine, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11739-024-03828-9

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 23, 2024
Online Publication Date Jan 15, 2025
Deposit Date Feb 10, 2025
Publicly Available Date Feb 10, 2025
Journal Internal and Emergency Medicine
Print ISSN 1828-0447
Electronic ISSN 1970-9366
Publisher Springer
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s11739-024-03828-9
Keywords Early Warning Score, Mortality, Pathophysiology, Acute disease, Length of stay, Diagnosis
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3475452

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