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Acute care service performance during winter: report from the winter SAMBA 2020 national audit of acute care
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Acute care service performance during winter: report from the winter SAMBA 2020 national audit of acute care

Cat Atkin, Thomas Knight, Christian Subbe, Mark Holland, Timothy Cooksley, Daniel Lasserson and Bangor University & Ysbyty Gwynedd Hospital Bangor, Wales
Acute Medicine Journal, Vol.19(4), pp.220-229
16/11/2020

Abstract

The Winter Society for Acute Medicine Benchmarking Audit (SAMBA) provides the first comparison of performance within acute medicine against clinical quality indicators during winter, a time of increased pressure and demand on acute services. 105 hospitals participated in Winter SAMBA, collecting data over 24-hours on 30th January 2020. 5626 patients were included. Participating units saw a median of 48 patients (range 13-131). Comparison between Winter SAMBA and SAMBA19 found less patients had an early warning score within 30 minutes during winter (74.3% vs 78.9%) and less were seen by a clinical decision maker within four hours (84.9% vs 87.9%). Unplanned admissions represented a higher proportion of workload (92.5% vs 90.1%). Patients were more likely to have a NEWS2 score of 3 or higher (30.1% vs 25.7%). Performance is poorer in winter, and patients are more unwell, needing prompt treatment. Services should ensure high quality care can be maintained through times of increased pressure, including winter.
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