Abstract
BACKGROUND: Emergency airway management represents an event with high acuity but unpredictable frequency and therefore presents a challenge for adequate staffing. Given circadian and seasonal variations, we hypothesized that the majority of emergency airway events happen after normal working hours and during the winter months.
METHODS: A retrospective analysis of 1,482 intubations by an emergency airway team over a 3-y period was performed. The data were obtained from hospitalized patients who required emergency airway management in a large academic medical center. A database of emergency airway consultations was analyzed for intubation time and date information, as well as geographic location within the hospital.
RESULTS: A greater percentage of emergency intubations occurred during day shift hours (7 am to 7 pm) compared with night shift hours, 57% and 43%, respectively (P < .01). The monthly frequency of intubations was not uniformly distributed across the year (P < .01). The greatest percentage of intubations was performed in February (10.9%), with the lowest being recorded in August (4.7%).
CONCLUSIONS: Emergency airway service utilization is highest during daytime hours, with seasonal variations composed of higher consults in the winter and lower consults in the summer.
Footnotes
- Correspondence: M Christopher Adams MD, Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, 55 Fruit Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02114. E-mail: adamsmc{at}gmail.com.
Dr Hess discloses relationships with Philips Respironics, Pari, Covidien, Maquet, Merck, and Bayer. The other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Dr Adams presented an abstract of this study at the Society of Critical Care Medicine Annual Congress, held January 15–19, 2011, in San Diego, California.
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