Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
Browse
- No file added yet -

A pilot cross-sectional study of patients presenting with cellulitis to emergency departments.

Download (192.71 kB)
Version 2 2022-04-05, 11:45
Version 1 2019-11-22, 16:07
journal contribution
posted on 2022-04-05, 11:45 authored by Michael QuirkeMichael Quirke, Jean Saunders, Ronald O'Sullivan, Hristijan Milenkovski, Abel WakaiAbel Wakai

To characterise the Emergency Department (ED) prevalence of cellulitis, factors predicting oral antibiotic therapy and the utility of the Clinical Resource Efficiency Support Team (CREST) guideline in predicting patient management in the ED setting, a prospective, cross-sectional study of consecutive adult patients presenting to 3 Irish EDs was performed. The overall prevalence of cellulitis was 12 per 1,000 ED visits. Of 59 patients enrolled, 45.8% were discharged. Predictors of treatment with oral antibiotics were: CREST, Class 1 allocation (odds ratio (OR) 6.81, 95% Cl =1.5-30.1, p=0.012), patient self-referral (OR= 6.2, 95% Cl 1.9- 20.0, p=0.03) and symptom duration longer than 48 hours (OR 1.2, 95% Cl = 1.0-1.5,p=0.049). In conflict with guideline recommendation, 43% of patients in CREST Class 1 received IV therapy. Treatment with oral antibiotics was predicted by CREST Class 1 allocation, self-referral, symptom duration of more than 48 hours and absence of pre-EO antibiotic therapy.

History

Comments

The original article is available at www.imj.ie

Published Citation

Quirke M, Saunders J, O'Sullivan R, Milenkovski H, Wakai A. A pilot cross-sectional study of patients presenting with cellulitis to emergency departments. Irish Medical Journal. 2014;107(10):316-8.

Publication Date

2014-11-01

PubMed ID

25556256

Department/Unit

  • General Practice
  • Beaumont Hospital

Usage metrics

    Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC