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Under Pressure–TrolleyGar, a Metric Reflecting a Hospital System at Crisis-Capacity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 July 2023

Maria Conradie
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Marco Smit
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Rochelle Janse van Rensburg
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Sayed Taqvi
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Brendan Orsmond
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Robin Andrews
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Andrea van der Vegte
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland University of South Wales, Caerleon, United Kingdom
Aishleigh Dowle
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Bryce Wickham
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Darshini Vythilingam
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Fahd Fayyaz
Affiliation:
University Hospital Wales, Cardiff, United Kingdom
Keith Kennedy
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Phillip Jordaan
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Ria Abraham
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Yuni Neduchelyn
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Thomas Kelly
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland
Michael Molloy
Affiliation:
Wexford General Hospital, Wexford, Ireland School of Medicine, UCD, Dublin, Ireland Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center - Fellowship in Disaster Medicine, Boston, USA
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Abstract

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Introduction:

Health service capacity has been an issue in Ireland since the 1980s swinging cuts. Government reports from 2003 have consistently identified a requirement for 3,000-5,000 extra beds on top of the current approximately 10,500 capacity. Acute hospital bed capacity issues have escalated, the formal system of recording “over capacity” patients or “patients on trolleys” has developed. A “Trolleygar” reports issues from the Health Service Executive (HSE) three times daily. This count is an underestimate as patients temporarily housed in day care units, surgical, or medical assessment units, discharge lounges and other clinical areas which have a bed space are not counted in this overcapacity measure. This study's aim is to calculate the annual number of days on which no patients were lodged on trolleys in Wexford General Hospital.

Method:

Descriptive study using anonymized freely available data from the national HSE Trolley GAR reports on trolley patients in Wexford General Hospital from January 2019 until September 2022. A Golden Zero trolley day was stated as a day on which there were no reported trolley-patients at the three time points, Silver Zero trolley day when two of the time periods recorded no trolleys and a Bronze Zero Trolley day when one period recorded a zero trolley count.

Results:

Data was collected on 1,369 days, with 90 days excluded due to missing data sets. There were 162 Golden days recorded (12.67% of total days). The year 2020 recorded the highest number of Golden days at 28.69% (105 days), followed by 2021 with 11.23% (41 days). During 2019 there were 3.84% (14 days) Golden days and 2022 had the lowest number (January-September) with 0.73% (2 days).

Conclusion:

Despite a zero-tolerance policy, Golden days are disappearing rapidly, capacity is urgently required with post-pandemic ED attendance surges worldwide. True recording of overcapacity patients is required for appropriate capacity modeling.

Type
Poster Presentations
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine