Current ED syncope management in Italian hospitals and prospects for optimization: a national survey

Intern Emerg Med. 2024 Apr;19(3):777-786. doi: 10.1007/s11739-023-03463-w. Epub 2023 Nov 14.

Abstract

To investigate current ED management of patients with syncope in Italy and opportunities for optimization, we carried out a questionnaire survey involving 102 directors of ED facilities in our country, of any complexity level, with 55.9% located in the North, 97% equipped with an ED Observation Unit (EDOU), and 21.8% with an outpatient Syncope Unit (SU). 43.6% of EDs management is not standardized. Clinical judgment and monitoring are the main factors leading management while old age and neuropsychic comorbidities the most hindering it. More than one third of ED facilities treats fewer than half of patients in EDOU. Most of respondents (73.7%) reported an admission rate within 20%, primarily in cardiology, in the case of an established or suspected cardiac etiology of syncope. In most centers, the referral to the general practitioner is the priority path at discharge from ED. Nearly 50% of participants rated syncope management in their own center as sub-optimal. To optimize it, 98% of them believe that is appropriate to implement a standardized approach, with and a large majority focusing on increasing diagnostic yield and safety; other priorities include application of guidelines, implementation of care pathways, enhancement of the role of EDOU, and direct path to the SU. This study highlights that the management of syncope patients in our country requires a further improvement, especially through standardization of pathways and adoption of innovative organizational solutions. Admissions appear to be lower than reported in the literature but this finding must be confirmed by a multicentric study based on direct collection of data.

Keywords: Emergency Department; Management optimization; Syncope.

MeSH terms

  • Emergency Service, Hospital* / organization & administration
  • Emergency Service, Hospital* / statistics & numerical data
  • Humans
  • Italy
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Syncope* / diagnosis
  • Syncope* / therapy