Hoot 2008
Hoot 2008
Emergency department (ED) crowding represents an international crisis that may affect the quality and
access of health care. We conducted a comprehensive PubMed search to identify articles that (1)
studied causes, effects, or solutions of ED crowding; (2) described data collection and analysis
methodology; (3) occurred in a general ED setting; and (4) focused on everyday crowding. Two
independent reviewers identified the relevant articles by consensus. We applied a 5-level quality
assessment tool to grade the methodology of each study. From 4,271 abstracts and 188 full-text
articles, the reviewers identified 93 articles meeting the inclusion criteria. A total of 33 articles studied
causes, 27 articles studied effects, and 40 articles studied solutions of ED crowding. Commonly
studied causes of crowding included nonurgent visits, “frequent-flyer” patients, influenza season,
inadequate staffing, inpatient boarding, and hospital bed shortages. Commonly studied effects of
crowding included patient mortality, transport delays, treatment delays, ambulance diversion, patient
elopement, and financial effect. Commonly studied solutions of crowding included additional
personnel, observation units, hospital bed access, nonurgent referrals, ambulance diversion,
destination control, crowding measures, and queuing theory. The results illustrated the complex,
multifaceted characteristics of the ED crowding problem. Additional high-quality studies may provide
valuable contributions toward better understanding and alleviating the daily crisis. This structured
overview of the literature may help to identify future directions for the crowding research agenda. [Ann
Emerg Med. 2008;52:126-136.]
interaction of supply and demand. We defined the scope of this the patient load. Within the groups representing causes, effects,
review to include articles that met 4 criteria: (1) they studied and solutions of ED crowding, we further categorized articles
causes, effects, or solutions of crowding as a primary objective; according to common themes that emerged among the primary
(2) they studied crowding on an empirical basis, with a findings during the data abstraction phase.
description of the data collection and analysis methodology; (3)
they studied crowding in the context of general emergency Assessment of Study Quality
medicine, rather than a specialty service such as psychiatric To assess the methodological quality of the studies, we
emergency medicine; and (4) they studied everyday crowding, applied a previously described 5-level instrument.15,16 Although
reflecting a focus on daily surge rather than exceptional it was originally developed to judge clinical trials, we applied the
circumstances; in other words, they did not study crowding instrument consistently to clinical trials, descriptive studies, and
associated with disaster events. surveys by using the following adaptation: Quality level 1
We identified a broad set of PubMed (MEDLINE) search included prospective studies that studied a clearly defined
terms to encompass each facet of the inclusion criteria. The outcome measure with a random or consecutive sample that was
search involved free text and Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) large enough to achieve narrow confidence intervals and diverse
terms. We described the concept of “ED” by the following enough to suggest generalizability of the findings. Quality level
search terms: Emergency Medical Services[MeSH] OR 2 included prospective studies that were more limited in terms
Emergency Medicine[MeSH] OR “emergency.” We described of sample size or generalizability. Quality level 3 included
the concept of “crowding” by the following search terms: retrospective studies that otherwise would have satisfied the
Crowding[MeSH] OR “crowding” OR “crowded” OR criteria for quality level 1 or 2. Quality level 4 included studies
“overcrowding” OR “overcrowded” OR “diversion” OR that sampled by convenience or other techniques that were
“divert” OR “congestion” OR “surge” OR “capacity” OR prone to introduce bias. Quality level 5 included studies that
“crisis” OR “crises” OR “occupancy.” We queried MEDLINE lacked a clearly defined or validated outcome measure. We did
on June 6, 2006, with the Boolean union of the above queries, not score articles that lacked necessary methodological details
restricting the search to English-language publications. for the quality instrument.
Study Selection
Two reviewers (N.R.H. and D.A.) independently examined RESULTS
the results returned by the MEDLINE search to identify The MEDLINE query returned 4,271 abstracts. The
potentially relevant abstracts. Articles that clearly did not meet reviewers identified 188 abstracts for full-text retrieval, of which
one or more of the review criteria according to the title and 93 articles satisfied the criteria for inclusion in the review. A
abstract were not considered further. When the 2 reviewers flow diagram of the selection process is presented in the Figure
disagreed, a consensus was reached through discussion. We 1. The rate of reviewer agreement during the abstract screening
retrieved full-text articles for the potentially relevant abstracts. phase, before consensus discussion, was 93% overall, 76%
The same 2 reviewers independently examined the full-text among included articles, and 94% among excluded articles. The
articles to determine which studies met all 4 of the inclusion statistic for chance-corrected agreement between the 2
criteria. Disagreements were again resolved through discussion reviewers was 0.47 (95% confidence interval: 0.42 to 0.52),
to reach a final consensus set of articles that met the review denoting moderate agreement.17
criteria. We found that quality level 1 contained 14 articles, quality
level 2 contained 12 articles, quality level 3 contained 47
Data Collection and Processing articles, quality level 4 contained 10 articles, and quality level 5
We used a data extraction form (Appendix E1, available contained 6 articles. Four articles were not scored because of
online at http://www.annemergmed.com) to record information inadequate reporting of methodology. The primary findings of
about the methods and results of each relevant article, including all articles are summarized briefly in the following sections. The
study design, study setting, study population, sample size, methods and results of each high-quality prospective study are
independent variables, dependent variables, and primary described in Table 1. A total of 33 articles studied causes, 27
findings. We assigned the articles to nonexclusive groups articles studied effects, and 40 articles studied solutions of ED
according to whether they investigated causes, effects, or crowding. This sum exceeds 93 because some articles were
solutions of ED crowding. We attempted to represent the assigned to multiple categories as necessary.
intentions of the original authors when assigning each article to
a group. For example, an issue such as ambulance diversion may Causes
be considered a cause, effect, or solution of ED crowding, Three general themes existed among the causes of ED
depending on the perspective of each study: it might be a cause crowding: input factors, throughput factors, and output factors.
of crowding at nearby institutions to which patients are These themes correspond to a conceptual framework for
diverted, it might be an effect of crowding at a single institution studying ED crowding.18 Input factors reflected sources and
of interest, or it might be a solution of crowding by reducing aspects of patient inflow. Throughput factors reflected
correlation between ED treatment time and hospital patients to receive timely care at their preferred institutions.
occupancy.41 A period of widespread hospital restructuring in Provider losses reflected consequences borne by the health care
Toronto independently increased the rate of severe crowding system itself. The commonly studied effects of crowding are
from 0.5% to 6% of the time.42 Length of stay in one ED summarized in Table 3.
increased substantially when the hospital occupancy levels Adverse outcomes. We identified patient mortality to be a
exceeded 90%.43 A survey of Korean EDs linked high hospital commonly studied adverse outcome of crowding.
occupancy levels to ED crowding.44 A study in Portland found Four articles focused on patient mortality: One study found a
that a decrease in the number of hospital beds was strongly significant increase in mortality associated with weekly ED
associated with an increase in ambulance diversion.45 Another volume.52 High occupancy in one Australian ED was estimated
study estimated that a hospital closure would affect the nearest to cause 13 patient deaths per year.53 Another study associated a
ED by increasing ambulance diversion by 56 hours per month combined measure of hospital and ED crowding with an
for 4 months.46 increased risk of mortality at 2, 7, and 30 days after hospital
Additional themes. Five surveys and interviews identified admission.54 In Houston, a statistically insignificant trend was
factors that health care providers and other stakeholders perceive found for higher mortality among trauma patients who were
to be important causes of ED crowding: increasing patient admitted during ambulance diversion.55
volume and acuity, shortages of treatment areas, shortages of Reduced quality. We identified transport delays and
nursing staff, delays in ancillary services, boarding inpatients, treatment delays to be commonly studied effects of crowding
and hospital bed shortages.47-51 pertaining to reduced quality.
Four articles examined transport delays: Ambulance diversion
Effects was shown to increase transport time and distance in 2
Four general themes existed among the effects of ED studies.56,57 A study focused on cardiac patients found that the
crowding: adverse outcomes, reduced quality, impaired access, 90th percentile of transport time increased when multiple local
and provider losses. Adverse outcomes reflected health-related hospitals were on diversion.58 During 2 years in which
patient endpoints. Reduced quality reflected benchmarks of the crowding was exacerbated in Toronto, the 90th percentile of
care delivery process. Impaired access reflected the ability of
of-care laboratory testing, which decreased the length of stay by Department Overcrowding Scale (NEDOCS) explained 49% of
41 minutes.84 the variation in physician and nurse assessments of crowding.99
Demand management. We identified nonurgent referrals, The Real-time Emergency Analysis of Demand Indicators were
ambulance diversion, and destination control to be commonly designed for real-time monitoring of ED operations, although
studied solutions of crowding involving demand management. they did not correlate with providers’ opinions on crowding.100
Four studies tested nonurgent referrals: A survey of ED The Work Score predicted ambulance diversion at its institution
patients found that 38% would swap their ED visit for a of origin with area under the receiver operating characteristic
primary care appointment within 72 hours.19 A randomized, curve of 0.89.101 A comparative validation, which used staff
controlled trial focused on 3 common symptom complexes and assessments of crowding as the outcome, estimated the area
found that they may be deferred for next-day primary care under the receiver operating characteristic curve of the EDWIN
without worsening self-reported health status on follow-up.85 to be 0.80 and of the NEDOCS to be 0.83.102 However, an
When following up nonurgent patients who were triaged to external validation of the NEDOCS in Australia concluded that
receive care elsewhere, one group found that there were no it was not useful, according to Bland-Altman and statistics.103
major adverse outcomes, and 42% of the patients received same- A sampling form consisting of 7 operational measures was
day care elsewhere.86 A similar study found that 94% of shown to correlate well with staff assessments of crowding.104 A
nonurgent patients who were referred to community-based care panel of experts described 38 consensus operational measures
reported that their condition was better or unchanged.87 that may be used to assess crowding levels.105
Five studies investigated ambulance diversion: By one Two studies used queuing theory: One group illustrated the
calculation, ambulance diversion decreased the rate of ability of discrete event simulation to model ED operations, and
ambulance arrivals by 30% to 50%.88 A similar calculation they tested its applicability by analyzing a proposed triage
found that “red-alert” ambulance diversion reduced the arrival scheme.106 A similar study described a separate discrete event
rate by 0.4 per hour.89 When one hospital committed to simulation and studied the effects of physician utilization on
avoiding ambulance diversion for 1 week, the need for diversion patient waiting times.107
at a nearby hospital was almost eliminated.90 Standardized Additional themes. Five studies described multifaceted
administrative interventions that could not be classified
diversion criteria in Sacramento, targeted to decrease “round-
separately: A broad intervention consisting of 51 actions
robin” crowding, reduced the rate of ambulance diversion by
reduced ED length of stay and ambulance diversion in
74% despite increased patient volume.91 San Diego
Melbourne.108 One network deployed several interventions,
implemented a standardized policy for initiating ambulance
tuned for the individual needs of 4 hospitals, and reduced the
diversion among all local hospitals and reduced ambulance
amount of ambulance diversion by 25% and 34% in
diversion by 75%.92
consecutive years.109 A group of hospitals in Rochester deployed
Two studies proposed destination control: The use of
several interventions, and they reported that the most effective
Internet-accessible operating information to redistribute
interventions occurred outside the ED.110 Another study
ambulances reduced the need for diversion from 1,788 hours to
reported interventions, including more physicians, improved
1,138 hours in one network.93 Another study described a
ancillary services, and changes in hospital policy, that reduced
physician-directed ambulance destination control initiative that length of stay by half.111 One hospital deployed a multipronged
reduced diversion by 41%.94 intervention, which involved a short-stay unit, additional
Three studies considered other aspects of demand physicians, and an early warning system, to deal with holiday
management: A trial of paramedic-initiated nontransport found demand surges.112
that 2.4% of nontransported pediatric patients were later
admitted to the hospital.95 Three social interventions designed LIMITATIONS
for frequent visitors, which included education and counseling, This study has a number of limitations that merit discussion.
were associated with decreased ED utilization.96 Another study First, we may not have captured every article that studied
targeted frequent users with case management interventions, but causes, effects, and solutions of ED crowding. We limited the
the rate of ED utilization was unchanged.97 search to English-language articles, so any relevant articles
Operations research. The studies within the operations published in foreign languages were not included. We avoided
research theme did not describe direct solutions to ED searching the grey literature with a general purpose internet
crowding; however, they proposed to support solutions through query, and we did not hand-search the references of included
improved business intelligence. We identified crowding articles. If used, these 2 techniques might have impaired the
measures and queuing theory to be commonly studied solutions reproducibility of our review. We searched a single database;
to crowding according to operations research. moreover, it is possible that our search terms did not capture all
Eight studies described crowding measures: The Emergency aspects of the topic. The MeSH vocabulary contains a single
Department Work Index (EDWIN) associated well with term related to crowding, so we supplemented the search with a
ambulance diversion and less well with secondary outcome large set of free-text keywords. We attempted to minimize the
measures at its institution of origin.98 The National Emergency likelihood of missed articles by applying a broad search strategy.
We also used a conservative approach during the abstract operational changes involve the entire department, rather than
screening phase, retrieving the full-text articles for all abstracts individual patients who may be randomized to experimental
that could not be clearly excluded. The moderate value may and control groups.85 We believe that the crowding literature
be explained because one author was more conservative than the would benefit from more randomized controlled trials
other in marking abstracts for full-text retrieval. This issue was examining patient-focused interventions.
identified and resolved during the consensus discussion. We Although several studies investigated nonurgent and
believe our methodology captured the majority of pertinent frequent-flyer visits, relatively little evidence suggests they
articles. independently cause ED crowding.19-23,25 This notion is
Second, the diversity of methodology, outcome measures, supported by recent literature.113 More evidence is available to
and reporting among the original articles rendered aspects of identify inpatient boarding and other hospital-related factors as
this review difficult. We attempted to describe the primary causes of ED crowding.33,34,38-46 These studies corroborate with
findings of each study as consistently as possible, noting the successful interventions that reduced crowding by altering the
effect sizes of each study when feasible and in other cases operation of hospital and community services other than the
describing the nature of the findings in more qualitative terms. ED.78,79,81,82,90-93 We believe that the crowding literature
In some cases, our descriptions were limited according to the would benefit from more studies that analyze the ED in the
reporting of the original articles. The brief summaries that we context of integrated hospital processes and focus on
provide do not capture the full complexity of each study, so our multicenter community networks rather than single institutions.
review is intended to guide interested readers to the original The results suggest that standard operations management
cited articles. We did not conduct a formal meta-analysis, tools, such as queuing theory, have only recently been applied in
because of the breadth of study designs and endpoints an effort to improve ED patient flow.106,107 We are aware of
considered. We refrain from making strong conclusions about few previous reports describing such applications in the ED
which factors are most important because these would be based setting.114 By contrast, these tools were adopted much earlier by
primarily on judgment rather than numeric inference. industries like airlines and manufacturing. This lag is analogous
Third, the classification of studies into groups and themes to the gap between basic science and clinical science, which
was partly subjective, so objections may be made regarding how translational research aims to address. A result of queuing theory
particular articles were categorized. We acknowledge that there states that a system with varying inputs and fixed capacity will
may be no clearly correct taxonomy for grouping this diverse set
become congested for transient periods.115 By consequence,
of articles. For instance, measurement tools and queuing models
permanent increases in resources may be neither efficient nor
would not reduce ED crowding unless paired with an
adequate to address crowding, given the fluctuating demand.
intervention plan. Regardless, we have classified these articles as
The review includes 1 study demonstrating the feasibility of
solutions, insofar as the original authors intended their research
deploying additional resources on demand to alleviate ED
to support crowding interventions. Our intention in using this
crowding.76 We believe that the crowding literature would
trichotomy of causes, effects, and solutions was to provide a
benefit from studies that apply standard management research
structured overview of the relevant literature, which we hope
techniques to ED operations and investigate ways to alter
benefits the reader.
resource availability dynamically according to demand.
DISCUSSION When considered as a whole, the body of literature
A substantial body of literature exists describing the causes, demonstrates that ED crowding is a local manifestation of a
effects, and solutions of ED crowding. The major themes systemic disease. The causes of ED crowding involve a complex
among the causes of crowding included nonurgent visits, network of interwoven processes ranging from hospital
frequent-flyer patients, influenza season, inadequate staffing, workflow to viral epidemics. The effects of ED crowding are
inpatient boarding, and hospital bed shortages. The major numerous and adverse. Various targeted solutions to crowding
themes among the effects of crowding included patient have been shown to be effective, and further studies may
mortality, transport delays, treatment delays, ambulance demonstrate new innovations. This broad overview of the
diversion, patient elopement, and financial effect. The major current research may help to inform the future research agenda
themes among the solutions of crowding included additional and, subsequently, to protect the fragile safety net of the health
personnel, observation units, hospital bed access, nonurgent care system.
referrals, ambulance diversion, destination control, crowding
measures, and queuing theory. Supervising editor: David J. Magid, MD, MPH
The quality instrument that we used indicated that a large Funding and support: By Annals policy, all authors are required
number of high-quality articles have been published about ED to disclose any and all commercial, financial, and other
crowding.15,16 We identified a total of 26 prospective studies relationships in any way related to the subject of this article,
and 47 retrospective studies that met the criteria for the 3 that might create any potential conflict of interest. See the
highest quality levels. We noted a scarcity of randomized Manuscript Submission Agreement in this issue for examples
controlled trials in this review, perhaps because many ED of specific conflicts covered by this statement. Dr. Hoot was
supported by National Library of Medicine grant LM07450-02 18. Asplin BR, Magid DJ, Rhodes KV, et al. A conceptual model of
and National Institute of General Medical Studies grant T32 emergency department crowding. Ann Emerg Med. 2003;42:
GM07347. The research was also supported by National 173-180.
Library of Medicine grant R21 LM009002-01. The authors 19. Grumbach K, Keane D, Bindman A. Primary care and public
declare no conflicts of interest pertaining to the publication of emergency department overcrowding. Am J Public Health. 1993;
83:372-378.
this work.
20. Afilalo J, Marinovich A, Afilalo M, et al. Nonurgent emergency
Publication dates: Received for publication July 16, 2007. department patient characteristics and barriers to primary care.
Revision received January 26, 2008. Accepted for publication Acad Emerg Med. 2004;11:1302-1310.
March 11, 2008. Available online April 23, 2008. 21. Howard MS, Davis BA, Anderson C, et al. Patients’ perspective
on choosing the emergency department for nonurgent medical
Earn CME Credit: Continuing Medical Education for this article care: a qualitative study exploring one reason for overcrowding.
is available at: www.ACEP-EMedHome.com. J Emerg Nurs. 2005;31:429-435.
22. Sprivulis P, Grainger S, Nagree Y. Ambulance diversion is not
Reprints not available from the authors.
associated with low acuity patients attending Perth metropolitan
Address for correspondence: Nathan R. Hoot, PhD, 400 emergency departments. Emerg Med Australas. 2005;17:11-15.
Eskind Biomedical Library, 2209 Garland Avenue, Nashville, 23. Huang JA, Tsai WC, Chen YC, et al. Factors associated with
TN 37232; 615-936-3720, fax 615-936-1427; E-mail frequent use of emergency services in a medical center. J
Formos Med Assoc. 2003;102:222-228.
nathan.hoot@vanderbilt.edu.
24. Andersen RM. Revisiting the behavioral model and access to
medical care: does it matter? J Health Soc Behav. 1995;36:1-
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Design: ________________________
_______________________________________
Institution: _____________________________________________________________
Population: ________________________
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Sample: _______________________________________________________________
Endpoint: ______________________________________________________________
Analysis: ______________________________________________________________
Causes: _______________________________________________________________
Effects: _______________________________________________________________
Solutions: _____________________________________________________________
Notes: ________________________________________________________________
Appendix E1. Data extraction form