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Flattening the other curve: Reducing emergency department STEMI delays during the COVID-19 pandemic - 29/10/21

Doi : 10.1016/j.ajem.2021.06.057 
Jesse T.T. McLaren, MD a, b, , Ahmed K. Taher, MD MPH a, c , Lucas B. Chartier, MD CM MPH a, c
a Emergency Department, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada 
b Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada 
c Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada 

Corresponding author at: Toronto General Hospital, 200 Elizabeth Street R. Fraser Elliott Building, Ground Floor, Room 480, Toronto, ON M5G 2C4, Canada.Toronto General Hospital200 Elizabeth Street R. Fraser Elliott BuildingGround FloorRoom 480TorontoONM5G 2C4Canada

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Abstract

Background

The COVID-19 pandemic has been associated with ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) reperfusion delays despite reduced emergency department (ED) volumes. However, little is known about ED contributions to these delays. We sought to measure STEMI delays and ED quality benchmarks over the course of the first two waves of the pandemic.

Study

This study was a multi-centre, retrospective chart review from two urban, academic medical centres. We obtained ED volumes, COVID-19 tests and COVID-19 cases from the hospital databases and ED Code STEMIs with culprit lesions from the cath lab. We measured door-to-ECG (DTE) time and ECG-to-Activation (ETA) time during the phases of the pandemic in our jurisdiction: pre-first wave (Jan-Mar 2020), first wave (Apr-June 2020), post-first wave (July-Nov 2020), and second wave (Dec 2020 to Feb 2021). We calculated median DTE and ETA times and compared them to the 2019 baseline using Wilcox rank-sum test. We calculated the percentages of DTE ≤10 min and of ETA ≤10 min and compared them to baseline using chi-square test. We also utilized Statistical Process Control (SPC) Xbar-R charts to assess for special cause variation.

Results

COVID-19 cases began during the pre-wave phase, but there was no change in ED volumes or STEMI quality metrics. During the first wave ED volumes fell by 40%, DTE tripled (10.0 to 29.5 min, p = 0.016), ETA doubled (8.5 to 17.0 min, p = 0.04), and percentages for both DTE ≤10 min and ETA ≤10 min fell by three-quarters (each from more than 50%, to both 12.5%, both p < 0.05). After the first wave all STEMI quality benchmarks returned to baseline and did not significantly change during the second wave. A brief period of special cause variation was noted for DTE during the first wave.

Conclusions

Both DTE and ETA metrics worsened during the first wave of the pandemic, revealing how it negatively impacted the triage and diagnosis of STEMI patients. But these normalized after the first wave and were unaffected by the second wave, indicating that nurses and physicians adapted to the pandemic to maintain STEMI quality of care. DTE and ETA metrics can help EDs identify delays to reperfusion during the pandemic and beyond.

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Highlights

STEMI patients had delayed ED triage and diagnosis during the first wave of COVID.
Providers adapted and quality metrics were not affected by the second wave.
Door-to-ECG and ECG-to-Activation times are complementary quality metrics in the ED.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Keywords : ST elevation myocardial infarction, COVID-19, Quality improvement


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© 2021  The Authors. Publié par Elsevier Masson SAS. Tous droits réservés.
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Vol 49

P. 367-372 - novembre 2021 Retour au numéro
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