Suspected cardiac chest pain accounts for 2-4% attendances at the Emergency Department. Approximately 18% of these patients will be having a myocardial infarction. Around 11% of these patients will die, over half of them within the first twelve hours after symptom onset. With appropriate early treatment, many deaths can be prevented.
How are patients presenting with undifferentiated chest pain, that is suspected to be cardiac in origin, currently managed in the Emergency Department?
Retrospective audit
Sample: 50 Emergency Department patient records
Criteria
Inclusions: Patients over 25 years old coded as Cardiac chest pain (Including Angina, unstable angina, NSTEMI, ACS.)
Exclusions: STEMIs are excluded
Choose and Audit to view
1st December 2012
Date | Patients | Measured | Results | Standard | Regional avg. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
01st December 2012 | Patients aged over 25 years with cardiac pain suspected as their primary diagnosis by the initial treating physician OR central or leftsided chest pain that was not otherwise explained. | Management according to criteria | ECG performed within 10 minutes of arrival in ED | 100 % | - |
ECG review documented did not miss significant ST or T wave abnormalities | 100 % | - | |||
Aspirin either given in ED or documented evidence of being taken prior to attendance | 100 % | - | |||
Risk stratification performed according to local guidelines | 100 % | - | |||
(Anti-thrombin or LMWH) given in to high risk patients (according to local guidance) unless contraindicated | 100 % | - | |||
Low risk CCP patients undergo a structured rule out protocol (in accordance with local policy) | 100 % | - |
x
x