Adult patients with constipation presenting to the emergency department: Can care be improved?

Author:

Bunting Catherine1,Smith Emily2,Dunham Fiona3,Simpson Sally3,Truter Piers24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Rockingham General Hospital Perth Western Australia Australia

2. School of Health Sciences and Physiotherapy The University of Notre Dame Australia Fremantle Western Australia Australia

3. Physiotherapy Pelvic Health Service Fiona Stanley Hospital Perth Western Australia Australia

4. Emergency Department Fiona Stanley Hospital Perth Western Australia Australia

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThis study aimed to establish the demographic profile of adult patients presenting with constipation and constipation‐related issues to an Australian tertiary hospital ED, investigate ED management and referral pathways in this cohort and determine satisfaction of these aspects of care from a patient's perspective.MethodsThis is a single‐centre study conducted in an Australian tertiary hospital ED which sees 115 000 presentations annually. ED presentations of adults aged 18–80 years with symptoms of constipation were evaluated through retrospective electronic medical record audit and follow‐up by survey 3–6 months after their ED presentation.ResultsThe patients presenting to the ED with constipation had a median age of 48 years (IQR 33.5–63.5) and arrived self‐referred by private transport. Median length of stay was 292 min. 22% of patients reported they had previously attended the ED for the same issue within the previous year. Diagnosis of chronic constipation was inconsistent, with limited supporting documentation. Constipation was largely managed with aperients. Four in five patients were satisfied with ED care; however, 3–6 months post‐ED visit, 92% of patients reported ongoing bowel‐related issues, reflecting the chronic course of functional constipation.ConclusionThis is the first study to investigate the management of constipation in adult patients in an Australian ED setting. It is important that ED clinicians recognise that functional constipation is a chronic condition and many patients have persistent symptoms. There are opportunities for quality‐of‐care improvements including diagnostics, treatment, and referral post‐discharge to allied health, nursing and medical specialist services.

Funder

University of Notre Dame Australia

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Emergency Medicine

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