Fallacy of Median Door‐to‐ECG Time: Hidden Opportunities for STEMI Screening Improvement

Author:

Yiadom Maame Yaa A. B.1ORCID,Gong Wu2ORCID,Patterson Brian W.3,Baugh Christopher W.4ORCID,Mills Angela M.5,Gavin Nicholas5ORCID,Podolsky Seth R.67,Salazar Gilberto8,Mumma Bryn E.9,Tanski Mary10,Hadley Kelsea11,Azzo Caitlin12,Dorner Stephen C.13,Ulintz Alexander14,Liu Dandan2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine Stanford University Palo Alto CA

2. Department of Biostatistics Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville TN

3. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health Madison WI

4. Department of Emergency Medicine Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School Boston MA

5. Department of Emergency Medicine Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons New York NY

6. Legacy Health Portland OR

7. Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine at Washington State University Spokane WA

8. Department of Emergency Medicine Parkland HospitalUniversity of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Dallas TX

9. Department of Emergency Medicine University of CaliforniaDavis, School of Medicine Sacramento CA

10. Department of Emergency Medicine Oregon Health & Sciences University Portland OR

11. School of Medicine American University of the Caribbean Cupecoy Sint Maarten

12. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA

13. Department of Emergency Medicine Massachusetts General HospitalHarvard Medical School Boston MA

14. Department of Emergency Medicine Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis IN

Abstract

Background ST‐segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) guidelines recommend screening arriving emergency department (ED) patients for an early ECG in those with symptoms concerning for myocardial ischemia. Process measures target median door‐to‐ECG (D2E) time of 10 minutes. Methods and Results This 3‐year descriptive retrospective cohort study, including 676 ED‐diagnosed patients with STEMI from 10 geographically diverse facilities across the United States, examines an alternative approach to quantifying performance: proportion of patients meeting the goal of D2E≤10 minutes. We also identified characteristics associated with D2E>10 minutes and estimated the proportion of patients with screening ECG occurring during intake, triage, and main ED care periods. We found overall median D2E was 7 minutes (IQR:4–16; range: 0–1407 minutes; range of ED medians: 5–11 minutes). Proportion of patients with D2E>10 minutes was 37.9% (ED range: 21.5%–57.1%). Patients with D2E>10 minutes, compared to those with D2E≤10 minutes, were more likely female (32.8% versus 22.6%, P =0.005), Black (23.4% versus 12.4%, P =0.005), non‐English speaking (24.6% versus 19.5%, P =0.032), diabetic (40.2% versus 30.2%, P =0.010), and less frequently reported chest pain (63.3% versus 87.4%, P <0.001). ECGs were performed during ED intake in 62.1% of visits, ED triage in 25.3%, and main ED care in 12.6%. Conclusions Examining D2E>10 minutes can identify opportunities to improve care for more ED patients with STEMI. Our findings suggest sex, race, language, and diabetes are associated with STEMI diagnostic delays. Moving the acquisition of ECGs completed during triage to intake could achieve the D2E≤10 minutes goal for 87.4% of ED patients with STEMI. Sophisticated screening, accounting for differential risk and diversity in STEMI presentations, may further improve timely detection.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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