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Lopez-Barbeito, BAuthorColl-Vinent, BAuthorFont Puig, CarmeAuthorCurtelin, DAuthorSalgado, EAuthorAya, FAuthorGalicia Paredes, MiguelAuthorMiro, OAuthor

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Factors associated with revisits by patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection discharged from a hospital emergency department

Publicated to:Emergencias: Revista De La Sociedad Española De Medicina De Urgencias Y Emergencias. 32 (6): 386-394 - 2020-12-01 32(6), DOI:

Authors: Lopez-Barbeito, Beatriz; Garcia-Martinez, Ana; Coll-Vinent, Blanca; Placer, Arrate; Font, Carme; Rosa Vargas, Carmen; Sanchez, Carolina; Pinango, Daniela; Gomez-Angelats, Elisenda; Curtelin, David; Salgado, Emilio; Aya, Francisco; Martinez-Nadal, Gemma; Ramon Alonso, Jose; Garcia-Gozalbes, Julia; Fresco, Leticia; Galicia, Miguel; Perea, Milagrosa; Carbo, Miriam; Iniesta, Nerea; Escoda, Ona; Perello, Rafael; Cuerpo, Sandra; Flores, Vanesa; Alemany, Xavier; Miro, Oscar; del Mar Ortega, Ma

Affiliations

Univ Barcelona, Hosp Clin, Area Urgencias, Barcelona, Spain - Author

Abstract

Objective. To analyze emergency department (ED) revisits from patients discharged with possible coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).Methods. Retrospective observational study of consecutive patients who came to the ED over a period of 2 months and were diagnosed with possible COVID-19. We analyzed clinical and epidemiologic variables, treatments given in the ED, discharge destination, need to revisit, and reasons for revisits. Patients who did or did not revisit were compared, and factors associated with revisits were explored.Results. The 2378 patients included had a mean age of 57 years; 49% were women. Of the 925 patients (39%) discharged, 170 (20.5%) revisited the ED, mainly for persistence or progression of symptoms. Sixty-six (38.8%) were hospitalized. Odds ratios (ORs) for the following factors showed an association with revisits: history of rheumatologic disease (OR, 2.97; 95% CI, 1.10-7.99; P = .03), digestive symptoms (OR, 1.73; 95% CI, 1.14-2.63; P = .01), respiratory rate over 20 breaths per minute (OR, 1.03; 95% CI, 1.0-1.06; P = .05), and corticosteroid therapy given in the ED (OR, 7.78; 95% CI, 1.77-14.21, P = .01). Factors associated with hospitalization after revisits were age over 48 years (OR, 2.57; 95% CI, 1 42-4.67; P = .002) and fever (OR, 4.73; 95% CI, 1.99-11.27; P = .001).Conclusions. Patients under the age of 48 years without comorbidity and with normal vitals can be discharged from the ED without fear of complications. A history of rheumatologic disease, fever, digestive symptoms, and a respiratory rate over 20 breaths per minute, or a need for corticosteroid therapy were independently associated with revisits. Fever and age over 48 years were associated with a need for hospitalization.

Keywords

AdultAgedCovid-19Emergency health servicesEmergency service, hospitalFemaleHumansInfeccionMaleMiddle agedOdds ratioOutcomesPatient dischargePatient readmissionRetrospective studiesRevisitaRevisitsRisk assessmentRisk factorsSars-cov-2Urgencias

Quality index

Bibliometric impact. Analysis of the contribution and dissemination channel

The work has been published in the journal Emergencias: Revista De La Sociedad Española De Medicina De Urgencias Y Emergencias due to its progression and the good impact it has achieved in recent years, according to the agency WoS (JCR), it has become a reference in its field. In the year of publication of the work, 2020, it was in position 5/32, thus managing to position itself as a Q1 (Primer Cuartil), in the category Emergency Medicine.

From a relative perspective, and based on the normalized impact indicator calculated from World Citations provided by WoS (ESI, Clarivate), it yields a value for the citation normalization relative to the expected citation rate of: 1.39. This indicates that, compared to works in the same discipline and in the same year of publication, it ranks as a work cited above average. (source consulted: ESI Nov 14, 2024)

Specifically, and according to different indexing agencies, this work has accumulated citations as of 2025-06-30, the following number of citations:

  • WoS: 14
  • Europe PMC: 8

Leadership analysis of institutional authors

There is a significant leadership presence as some of the institution’s authors appear as the first or last signer, detailed as follows: First Author (López Barbeito, Beatriz) .