MAGNITUDE AND ASSOCIATED FACTORS OF EARLY MORTALITY AMONG DEATHS IN ADULT EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT, AT PUBLIC HOSPITALS, HAWASSA, SIDAMA, ETHIOPIA,2023.
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Date
2023-11
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hawassa universty
Abstract
Background: early mortality defined as death with 72 hours of emergency department
presentation. In low-income countries with limited resources, adult emergency department
mortality remains high. The majority (59.8%) of those deaths occur within the first three
days of admission to the emergency department in Ethiopia. Previously, only single-center
studies at tertiary hospitals were conducted in Ethiopia.
Objective: to assess the magnitude and associated factors of early mortality among deaths
in adult emergency departments at selected public hospitals in Hawassa, Sidama, Ethiopia,
from January 2021 to December 2022.
Methods: An institutional-based cross-sectional study design was applied. A systematic
random sampling technique was used to select 369 charts of patients who died in adult
emergency departments of selected public hospitals in two years. The data was collected
using a pre-tested data abstraction tool entered into the Kobo toolbox, then entered into
EpiData version 4.6.0 and exported to SPSS version 27 for analysis. By using binary
logistic regression Bivariate and multivariate analyses were run. Finally, statistical
significance was declared at p-value <0.05, and an adjusted odds ratio with a 95%
confidence interval was used to report the strength of the association
Result: This study result shows that 50.2% of the participants were between the ages of
25-54 with mean average 40.6 ± 17.5 and 67.7% were male. 288 (78%) died within 72
hours. Lack of prehospital care [(AOR = 4.2; 95% CI: 2.23, 7.87), P = 0.007], road traffic
accidents [(AOR = 4.1; 95% CI: 1.403, 12.076), P = 0.013], red triage categories [(AOR =
3.9; 95% CI: 1.6, 9.4), P = 0.003], had lack of investigation[(AOR = 3.4; 95% CI: 1.2,
9.4), comorbid illness [(AOR = 3.2; 95% CI: 1.558, 6.49), P = 0.001] and delayed initial
intervention [(AOR = 2.338; 95% CI: 1.259, 4.339), P = 0.007] were significantly
associated with early mortality.
Conclusion: In this study, a greater early mortality rate was detected. Early morality was
increased by a lack of prehospital treatment, road traffic accidents, a red warning score, a
lack of investigation, comorbidity, and a delay in the first intervention.
Description
Keywords
Early Mortality, Adult Emergency, Hawassa, Ethiopia
