Management of non-traumatic epistaxis in adults in the emergency department

Br J Hosp Med (Lond). 2021 Jun 2;82(6):1-6. doi: 10.12968/hmed.2021.0033. Epub 2021 Jun 30.

Abstract

Background/aims: Despite epistaxis being a common presentation to emergency departments there is a lack of guidelines, both nationally and internationally, for its management. The authors reviewed the current management of epistaxis and then introduced a new pathway for management to see if care could be improved. The aims were to evaluate the impact of the pathway on reduction of emergency department breaches, emergency ambulance transfers and hospital admissions.

Methods: The study was an interrupted time series analysis over 29 months and included 903 participants. A pathway for the management of adults with non-traumatic epistaxis was designed and implemented in a university teaching hospital with an emergency department annual attendance rate of 105 495 in 2019-20.

Results: The pathway led to a 14-minute longer stay in the emergency department, a 5% increase in emergency department breaches, an 8.2% reduction in admissions, a 3.6% reduction in emergency ambulance transfers, a 14.1% increase in nasal cautery and a 3.2% reduction in nasal packing.

Conclusions: The authors calculate that these results equate to roughly 56 hospital bed days saved, providing better care closer to home for patients, in addition to beneficial knock-on effects for other emergency department and admitted patients.

Keywords: Emergency medicine; Epistaxis; Quality improvement.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Ambulances
  • Cautery
  • Emergencies
  • Emergency Service, Hospital*
  • Epistaxis* / surgery
  • Epistaxis* / therapy
  • Humans
  • Retrospective Studies