
|
|
Emergency department visits for
home medical device failure during the 2003 North America blackout. OBJECTIVES: During a widespread North
American blackout in August 2003, the authors identified a cluster
of patients presenting to their northern Manhattan emergency department
(ED) with complaints related to medical device failure. The characteristics
of this group with respect to presenting complaint, type of device
failure, time spent in the ED, and disposition are described in
an effort to better understand the resource needs of this population. METHODS: This was a retrospective
chart review for all patients evaluated in an urban teaching ED
during a 24-hour period spanning the duration of regional power
failure. Charts for patients presenting with medical device failure
as part of their triage complaint were abstracted. RESULTS: Twenty-three of 255 patients
coming to the ED during the 24-hour period presented with medical
device failure. Nineteen of the device failures were due to nonfunctioning
oxygen conservers, three to ventilator failure, and two to airway
suction device failure (one patient had two devices fail). Thirteen
of these patients were admitted to the hospital and accounted
for 22% of all admissions during the study interval. Discharged
patients spent a mean of 15.1 hours (range: 3.8-24.4 hours) in
the ED. CONCLUSIONS: Patients using electrical medical devices seek care in the ED when power failure occurs, and they require significant ED and hospital resources. Effective disaster planning should anticipate the needs of this population.
|
|
Home
| About New
York ACEP | Calendar
| Contact Us
| Grants Copyright © 2006 New York ACEP, All Rights Reserved |