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Comparison of the National Early Warning Score in non‐elective medical and surgical patients
Author(s) -
Kovacs C.,
Jarvis S. W.,
Prytherch D. R.,
Meredith P.,
Schmidt P. E.,
Briggs J. S.,
Smith G. B.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
british journal of surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.202
H-Index - 201
eISSN - 1365-2168
pISSN - 0007-1323
DOI - 10.1002/bjs.10267
Subject(s) - medicine , early warning score , elective surgery , emergency medicine , receiver operating characteristic , general surgery , surgery
Background The National Early Warning Score ( NEWS ) is used to identify deteriorating patients in hospital. NEWS is a better discriminator of outcomes than other early warning scores in acute medical admissions, but it has not been evaluated in a surgical population. The study aims were to evaluate the ability of NEWS to discriminate cardiac arrest, death and unanticipated ICU admission in patients admitted to surgical specialties, and to compare the performance of NEWS in admissions to medical and surgical specialties. Methods Hospitalwide data over 31 months, from adult inpatients who stayed at least one night or died on the day of admission, were analysed. The data were categorized as elective or non‐elective surgical or medical admissions. The ability of NEWS to discriminate the outcomes above in these different groups was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve ( AUROC ). Results There were too few outcomes to permit meaningful comparison of elective admissions, so the analysis was constrained to comparison of non‐elective admissions. NEWS performed equally well, or better, for surgical as for medical patients. For death within 24 h the AUROC for surgical admissions was 0·914 (95 per cent c.i. 0·907 to 0·922), compared with 0·902 (0·898 to 0·905) for medical admissions. For the combined outcome of any of death, cardiac arrest or unanticipated ICU admission, the AUROC was 0·874 (0·868 to 0·880) for surgical admissions and 0·874 (0·871 to 0·877) for medical admissions. Conclusion NEWS discriminated deterioration in non‐elective surgical patients at least as well as in non‐elective medical patients.

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