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10.1016/j.jradnu.2014.11.003

http://scihub22266oqcxt.onion/10.1016/j.jradnu.2014.11.003
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C4374355!4374355!25821413
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suck abstract from ncbi


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pmid25821413      J+Radiol+Nurs 2015 ; 34 (1): 29-34
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  • Patients in the radiology department may be at increased risk of developing critical instability #MMPMID25821413
  • Ott LK; Pinsky MR; Hoffman LA; Clarke SP; Clark S; Ren D; Hravnak M
  • J Radiol Nurs 2015[Mar]; 34 (1): 29-34 PMID25821413show ga
  • The purpose of this study was to calculate the event rate for in-patients in the Radiology Department (RD) developing instability leading to calls for Medical Emergency Team assistance (MET-RD) compared to general ward (MET-W) patients. A retrospective comparison was done of MET-RD and MET-W calls in 2009 in a U.S. tertiary hospital with a well-established MET system. MET-RD and MET-W event rates represented as MET calls/hour/1000 admissions, adjusted for length of stay (LOS); rates also calculated for RD modalities. There were 31,320 hospital ward admissions had 1,230 MET-W, and among 149,569 radiology admissions there were 56 MET-RD. When adjusted for LOS, the MET-RD event rate was 2 times higher than the MET-W rate (0.48 vs. 0.24 events/hour/1000 admissions). Event rates differed by procedure: computed tomography (CT) had 38% of MET-RDs (event rate 0.89); magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) accounted for 27% (event rate 1.56). Nuclear medicine had 1% of RD admissions but these patients accounted for 5% of MET-RD (event rate 1.53). Interventional radiology (IR) had 6% of RD admissions but 16% of MET-RD (event rate 0.61). While general x-ray comprised 63% of RD admissions, only 11% of MET-RD involved their care (event rate 0.09). In conclusion, the overall MET-RD event rate was twice the MET-W event rate; CT, MRI and IR rates were 3.7?6.5 times higher than on wards. RD patients are at increased risk for a MET call compared to ward patients when the time at risk is considered. Increased surveillance of RD patients is warranted.
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