The Measurement of Daily Surge and Its Relevance to Disaster Preparedness
- 1 November 2006
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Academic Emergency Medicine
- Vol. 13 (11) , 1138-1141
- https://doi.org/10.1197/j.aem.2006.06.046
Abstract
This article reviews what is known about daily emergency department (ED) surge and ED surge capacity and illustrates its potential relevance during a catastrophic event. Daily ED surge is a sudden increase in the demand for ED services. There is no well-accepted, objective measure of daily ED surge. The authors propose that daily and catastrophic ED surge can be measured by the magnitude of the surge, as well as by the nature and severity of the illnesses and injuries that patients present with during the surge. The magnitude of an ED surge can be measured by the patient arrival rate per hour. The nature and severity of the surge can be measured by the type (e.g., trauma vs. infection vs. biohazard) and acuity (e.g., triage level) of the surge. Surge capacity is defined as the extent to which a system can respond to a rapid and sizeable increase in the demand for resources. ED surge capacity includes multiple dimensions, such as systems, space, staffing, and supplies. A multidimensional measure is needed that reflects both the core components and their relative contribution to ED surge capacity. Although many types of factors may influence ED surge capacity, relatively little formal research has been conducted in this area. A better understanding of daily ED surge capacity and influencing factors will improve our ability to simulate the potential impact that different types of catastrophic events may have on the surge capacity of hospital EDs nationwide.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Science of Surge: Detection and Situational AwarenessAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2006
- The Science of Surge: Detection and Situational AwarenessAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2006
- Development of an Emergency Department Work Score to Predict Ambulance DiversionAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2006
- Development of an Emergency Department Work Score to Predict Ambulance DiversionAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2006
- Effect of Increased ICU Capacity on Emergency Department Length of Stay and Ambulance DiversionAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 2005
- Estimating the Degree of Emergency Department Overcrowding in Academic Medical Centers: Results of the National ED Overcrowding Study (NEDOCS)Academic Emergency Medicine, 2004
- Development and Validation of a New Index to Measure Emergency Department CrowdingAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2003
- The Effect of Hospital Occupancy on Emergency Department Length of Stay and Patient DispositionAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2003
- Time Series Forecasts of Emergency Department Patient Volume, Length of Stay, and AcuityAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1994
- Emergency departments and crowding in United States teaching hospitalsAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1991