[Emergency Care Journal 2014; 10:4173] [page 76] Emergency physicians’ and nurses’ perception of quality of elderly care in the Emergency Department. Results of a national survey Gianfranco Cervellin, 1 Ivo Casagranda, 2 Pierdante Piccioni, 3 Giorgio Ricci, 4 Mario Benatti, 1 Massimo Pesenti Compagnoni 5 1 Emergency Department, Parma University Hospital; 2 Emergency Department, SS. Antonio e Biagio e Cesare Arrigo Hospital, Alessandria; 3 Emergency Department, Lodi Hospital; 4 Emergency Department, Verona University Hospital; 5 Emergency Department, Aosta Hospital, Italy Abstract The present study has been carried out to evaluate the current status of clinical, educa- tional, social, ethical, and resource issues related to the care of the elderly among emer- gency physicians (EPs) and emergency nurses (ENs) in Italy. A questionnaire was designed by our scientific society, the Academy of Emergency Medicine and Care (AcEMC), and disseminated directly or by e-mail to a large number of EPs and ENs in several Emergency Departments (EDs) throughout Italy, as well as in a Swiss center. Of the questionnaires, 524 were filled out and returned. Responders were in the majority females [273 vs 239; 12 not available (NA)], and nurses [259 vs 207 physi- cians vs 54 auxiliary; 4 NA]. Responses to five questions appeared to be normally distributed, whereas other questions elicited interesting responses. In this study focusing for the first time on the EPs’ and ENs’ perception of a broad spectrum of issues related to the elderly emergency care, the Italian community of EPs and ENs seems to be rather comfortable with geriatric emergency medicine, but largely unsatisfied with healthcare out-of-hospital services. The lack of elderly-specific diagnostic and therapeutic post-discharge pathways is broadly appreciated, and the concept of med- ical futility is not explicitly included in the vast majority of Italian hospital protocols. Introduction The mean age and the age distribution of the population is constantly increasing in many countries, due to both increased life expectancy and decreased fertility rates. 1 The elderly also represents a growing concern for Emergency Departments (EDs), accounting for 12 to 24% of all visits. 2 This population is admitted to the ED more often than younger adults, and often presents higher level of acu- ity, more severe medical conditions, a large number of comorbidities, which require a large volume of testing since older patients are more prone to be admitted and are at higher risk of death. 3,4 Since the number of elderly patients presenting to overcrowded EDs seems to be destined to further increase, the compre- hensive care of these patients is emerging as a crucial issue in the field of emergency medi- cine. 3,4 Hence, some authors have recently hypothesized that the emergency care offered to elderly patients may be characterized by poorer quality compared to that administered to younger adults. 5 Although several reports exist on elderly patients’ perception and needs in ED care, 6 little is known about emergency physicians’(EPs) and emergency nurses’ (ENs) perspective of the geriatric emergency medicine that they are currently practicing. One single survey has been published more than two decades ago, showing that the major- ity of EPs had more difficulty in managing of older compared with younger patients for each of seven indicative clinical presentations (i.e., abdominal pain, altered mental status, chest pain, dizziness/vertigo, fever, headache, major trauma), and most respondents reported that each of these presentations required more time and resources for management of older patients. 6 Moreover, the majority of them believed that the time spent during residency training regarding geriatric emergency medi- cine was inadequate. 7 It is hence widely acknowledged that both EPs and ENs may have a particularly negative perception of aging, based on the patient population that they usu- ally manage, and this is probably due to the fact that the interaction in the ED may produce a misleading picture of elderly people. 8 As such, aim of this study was to evaluate the perception of the current status of clinical, educational, social, ethical, and resource issues related to the care of the elderly among EPs and ENs in Italy. Materials and Methods A questionnaire based on 14 issues (Figure 1) was designed by our scientific society [Academy of Emergency Medicine and Care (AcEMC)], and subsequently disseminated either directly or via e-mail to a large number of EPs and ENs in several EDs throughout Italy and in one Swiss center (Bern). For the pur- poses of this questionnaire, elderly has been defined as a patient of >80 years old, or, if aged 65-80 years, with defined frailty. For each question, five numeric answers were provided, ranging from 1 (totally disagree) to 5 (totally agree). Several questions (i.e., 1, 2, 5, 7, 8, 11, and 12) were focused on the perception of atti- tude and capability to face geriatric emergency medicine. Some questions (i.e., 3, 4, 6, 13) were focused on the attitude and/or the quality of care and health records in pre-hospital and in-hospital settings (i.e., other than ED). Two questions (i.e., 9 and 10) were focused on what EPs and ENs consider possible and useful to be implemented in order to improve elderly care. Finally, the last question was focused on a spe- cific topic, i.e. futility. Not surprisingly, this question collected the lowest number of answers (i.e., 451). Anonymous survey responses were collected. For each center, an EP was responsible for the distribution and collection of the questionnaires, as well as for returning the surveys to our secretariat. All the questionnaires were filled out and collected between March and May 2014. The study was performed in agreement with the ethical standards established by the insti- tution in which the experiments were per- formed and the Helsinki Declaration of 1975. Due to the intrinsic nature of the study, an approval by ethic committee was not required. Each EP or nurse freely decided to respond or not to the questionnaire. Emergency Care Journal 2014; volume 10:4173 Correspondence: Gianfranco Cervellin, Emergency Department, Parma University Hospital, via Gramsci 14, 43126 Parma, Italy. Tel. +39.0521.703800 - Fax: +39.0521.703144. E-mail: gcervellin@ao.pr.it Key words: elderly, emergency department, sur- vey, quality of care. Aknowledgements: the Authors acknowledge all members of the National Committee of AcEMC (Libero Barozzi, Mario Cavazza, Daniele Coen, Nicola Di Battista, Carlo Fraticelli, Fabrizio Giostra, Giuseppe Lippi, Carlo Alessandro Locatelli, Ilenia Mezzocolli, Carolina Prevaldi, Giovanni Ricevuti, Bruno Tartaglino) for the kind support in collecting the questionnaires, as well as all doctors and nurses participating in the sur- vey. The results of this study have been partly pre- sented during the AcEMC Congress Geriatric Emergency Medicine held in Verona, Italy, May 16 th -17 th , 2014. Received for publication: 24 May 2014. Revision received: 4 August 2014. Accepted for publication: 11 August 2014. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (by-nc 3.0). ©Copyright G. Cervellin et al., 2014 Licensee PAGEPress, Italy Emergency Care Journal 2014; 10:4173 doi:10.4081/ecj.2014.4173 Non commercial use only