Readmission and Mortality
Cross-source consensus on Readmission and Mortality from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Other
Highlighted claims
- The secondary outcomes included a composite of 30-day emergency department readmission and 30-day mortality, as well as 90-day mortality and hospital length of stay. — Association between older patients receiving geriatric co-management at the emergency department and acute hospital admissions compared to usual care: an observational, controlled study in the Netherlands
- The study found no evidence that GEM co-management worsened the combined outcome of 30-day emergency department readmission and 30-day mortality. — Association between older patients receiving geriatric co-management at the emergency department and acute hospital admissions compared to usual care: an observational, controlled study in the Netherlands
- The composite outcome of 30-day emergency department readmission and 30-day mortality did not differ meaningfully between GEM co-management and usual care. — Association between older patients receiving geriatric co-management at the emergency department and acute hospital admissions compared to usual care: an observational, controlled study in the Netherlands
- The discussion stated that mortality within 30 or 90 days was not negatively affected. — Association between older patients receiving geriatric co-management at the emergency department and acute hospital admissions compared to usual care: an observational, controlled study in the Netherlands
- Unlike some multistrategy emergency department interventions, this study did not find a reduction in 30-day readmissions. — Association between older patients receiving geriatric co-management at the emergency department and acute hospital admissions compared to usual care: an observational, controlled study in the Netherlands