%0 Journal Article %T Emergency department length of stay for patients requiring mechanical ventilation: a prospective observational study %A Louise Rose %A Sara Gray %A Karen Burns %A Clare Atzema %A Alex Kiss %A Andrew Worster %A Damon C. Scales %A Gordon Rubenfeld %A Jacques Lee %J Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1757-7241-20-30 %X Prospective observational study of ED LOS for all patients receiving mechanical ventilation at four metropolitan EDs in Toronto, Canada over two six-month periods in 2009 and 2010.We identified 618 mechanically ventilated patients which represented 0.5% (95% CI 0.4%每0.5%) of all ED visits. Of these, 484 (78.3%) received invasive ventilation, 118 (19.1%) received NIV; 16 received both during the ED stay. Median Kaplan-Meier estimated duration of ED stay for all patients was 6.4ˋh (IQR 2.8每14.6). Patients with trauma diagnoses had a shorter median (IQR) LOS, 2.5ˋh (1.3每5.1), compared to ventilated patients with non-trauma diagnoses, 8.5ˋh (3.3每14.0) (p <0.001). Patients requiring NIV had a longer ED stay (16.6ˋh, 8.2每27.9) compared to those receiving invasive ventilation exclusively (4.6ˋh, 2.2每11.1) and patients receiving both (15.4ˋh, 6.4每32.6) (p <0.001). Longer ED LOS was associated with ED site and lower priority triage scores. Shorter ED LOS was associated with intubation at another ED prior to transfer.While patients requiring mechanical ventilation represent a small proportion of overall ED visits these critically ill patients frequently experienced prolonged ED stay especially those treated with NIV, assigned lower priority triage scores at ED presentation, and non-trauma patients. %K Mechanical ventilation %K Emergency department %K Non-invasive ventilation %K critical illness %K Acute respiratory failure %U http://www.sjtrem.com/content/20/1/30/abstract