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2 Early multidisciplinairy screening of dysphagia at admission to the emergency department – a pilot study

AimKnowledge about effect of early dysphagia screening is limited. The aim of this study is to examine the prevalence of dysphagia in the Emergency Department (ED) population.MethodThis study included consecutively hospitalised patients in 10 days from 2 pm–10 pm at the ED of North Denmark Regional...

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Published in:BMJ open 2018-04, Vol.8 (Suppl 1), p.A1-A1
Main Authors: Sørensen, LR, Sandager, D, Jørgensen, A, Christensen, AB, Ludwig, M, Leutscher, P, Melgaard, D
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Sandager, D
Jørgensen, A
Christensen, AB
Ludwig, M
Leutscher, P
Melgaard, D
description AimKnowledge about effect of early dysphagia screening is limited. The aim of this study is to examine the prevalence of dysphagia in the Emergency Department (ED) population.MethodThis study included consecutively hospitalised patients in 10 days from 2 pm–10 pm at the ED of North Denmark Regional Hospital. The screening took place within 2 hours of admission. Inclusion criteria were any of the following: age ≥65 years, neurological disorders, alcoholism, COPD, pneumonia, dyspnoea, diabetes or unexplained weight loss. A nurse screened patients with a water test and with signs of dysphagia tested by an occupational therapist with the V-VST and the MEOF-II.ResultsOf 140 eligible patients (56% male, median age 75 years) 95 (68%) were screened. It was impossible to screen 12 patients (9%) to limited time and 30 patients (21%) due to poor health condition and 5 patients (4%) declined participation. The prevalence of dysphagia in the study population was 16% (15 patients). Results from the water test were confirmed with V-VST and MEOF-II. In patients with lung related diseases or circulatory diseases was the prevalence respectively 25% and 24%. Patients, not screened due to poor health condition, were tested during hospitalisation and the prevalence of dysphagia was 75% in this group of patients.ConclusionThe prevalence in ED patients was 16%. Patients transferred to other departments due to poor health condition had prevalence of 75%. It is possible to screen patients in the ED. The water test is a useful screening tool in an acute setting.Conflict of interestNo conflicts of interestFundingNo funding
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The aim of this study is to examine the prevalence of dysphagia in the Emergency Department (ED) population.MethodThis study included consecutively hospitalised patients in 10 days from 2 pm–10 pm at the ED of North Denmark Regional Hospital. The screening took place within 2 hours of admission. Inclusion criteria were any of the following: age ≥65 years, neurological disorders, alcoholism, COPD, pneumonia, dyspnoea, diabetes or unexplained weight loss. A nurse screened patients with a water test and with signs of dysphagia tested by an occupational therapist with the V-VST and the MEOF-II.ResultsOf 140 eligible patients (56% male, median age 75 years) 95 (68%) were screened. It was impossible to screen 12 patients (9%) to limited time and 30 patients (21%) due to poor health condition and 5 patients (4%) declined participation. The prevalence of dysphagia in the study population was 16% (15 patients). Results from the water test were confirmed with V-VST and MEOF-II. In patients with lung related diseases or circulatory diseases was the prevalence respectively 25% and 24%. Patients, not screened due to poor health condition, were tested during hospitalisation and the prevalence of dysphagia was 75% in this group of patients.ConclusionThe prevalence in ED patients was 16%. Patients transferred to other departments due to poor health condition had prevalence of 75%. It is possible to screen patients in the ED. The water test is a useful screening tool in an acute setting.Conflict of interestNo conflicts of interestFundingNo funding</description><identifier>ISSN: 2044-6055</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 2044-6055</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-EMS.2</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>London: BMJ Publishing Group LTD</publisher><subject>Dysphagia ; Emergency medical care ; Medical screening ; Patient admissions</subject><ispartof>BMJ open, 2018-04, Vol.8 (Suppl 1), p.A1-A1</ispartof><rights>2018, Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions</rights><rights>2018 Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2018. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ . 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The aim of this study is to examine the prevalence of dysphagia in the Emergency Department (ED) population.MethodThis study included consecutively hospitalised patients in 10 days from 2 pm–10 pm at the ED of North Denmark Regional Hospital. The screening took place within 2 hours of admission. Inclusion criteria were any of the following: age ≥65 years, neurological disorders, alcoholism, COPD, pneumonia, dyspnoea, diabetes or unexplained weight loss. A nurse screened patients with a water test and with signs of dysphagia tested by an occupational therapist with the V-VST and the MEOF-II.ResultsOf 140 eligible patients (56% male, median age 75 years) 95 (68%) were screened. It was impossible to screen 12 patients (9%) to limited time and 30 patients (21%) due to poor health condition and 5 patients (4%) declined participation. The prevalence of dysphagia in the study population was 16% (15 patients). Results from the water test were confirmed with V-VST and MEOF-II. In patients with lung related diseases or circulatory diseases was the prevalence respectively 25% and 24%. Patients, not screened due to poor health condition, were tested during hospitalisation and the prevalence of dysphagia was 75% in this group of patients.ConclusionThe prevalence in ED patients was 16%. Patients transferred to other departments due to poor health condition had prevalence of 75%. It is possible to screen patients in the ED. 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The aim of this study is to examine the prevalence of dysphagia in the Emergency Department (ED) population.MethodThis study included consecutively hospitalised patients in 10 days from 2 pm–10 pm at the ED of North Denmark Regional Hospital. The screening took place within 2 hours of admission. Inclusion criteria were any of the following: age ≥65 years, neurological disorders, alcoholism, COPD, pneumonia, dyspnoea, diabetes or unexplained weight loss. A nurse screened patients with a water test and with signs of dysphagia tested by an occupational therapist with the V-VST and the MEOF-II.ResultsOf 140 eligible patients (56% male, median age 75 years) 95 (68%) were screened. It was impossible to screen 12 patients (9%) to limited time and 30 patients (21%) due to poor health condition and 5 patients (4%) declined participation. The prevalence of dysphagia in the study population was 16% (15 patients). Results from the water test were confirmed with V-VST and MEOF-II. 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subjects Dysphagia
Emergency medical care
Medical screening
Patient admissions
title 2 Early multidisciplinairy screening of dysphagia at admission to the emergency department – a pilot study
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