ABSTRACT
Objective:To retrospectively analyze the establishment and implementation effect of ECPR rapid response medical team in emergency department, and to explore a more efficient rescue mode.Methods:A total of 41 patients who started ECPR in the emergency room of a tertiary hospital in Beijing from November 2017 to September 2022 were selected as subjects. The 14 patients treated by the ECPR rapid response medical team in the emergency department were set as the experimental group, and the 27 patients treated by the ECPR team of the MDT mode led by the cardiac surgeon were set as the control group. The ECPR start-up time, pipeline pre-filling time, ECPR start-up to ECMO successful operation time, complication rate and treatment success rate were compared between the two groups.Results:There was no significant difference in the outcome between the two groups (all P>0.05), but the total time (min) of ECPR implementation by the rapid response medical team in the emergency department was shorter (20.86 ± 10.86 vs. 23.04 ± 11.40), the incidence of complications was lower, and the success rate of treatment was higher (28.57 % vs. 25.93 %). Conclusion:Establishing a mature ECPR rapid response team dominated by emergency medical care helps improve the rescue coordination and work efficiency, thereby providing the emergency protection and management of full -chain for the treatment of critical condition.
ABSTRACT
The shortage of emergency and critical care resources has become increasingly prominent,seriously reducing the quality and safety of care.How to improve the efficiency of the emergency and critical care platform is an urgent problem to be solved.Since 2020,the emergency department of Peking University Third Hospital has achieved an increase of 10%-20%in the annual visits of emergency and critically ill patients,the reduction of the emergency department length of stay and the improvement of survival rate using Objectives and Key Results(OKR)as an advanced management tool.It provides a new paradigm for improving efficiency of emergency department in large general hospitals.