Language

English

Publication Date

10-1-2025

Journal

JAMA Network Open

DOI

10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.39471

PMID

41143793

PMCID

PMC12559965

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

10-27-2025

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

Importance: Investments in emergency care systems are vital to ensuring universal health coverage and improving health outcomes in low- and middle-income countries.

Objective: To assess whether a package of emergency care interventions is associated with improved patient mortality and clinical care quality.

Design, setting, and participants: This pre-post quality improvement study was conducted at a single urban referral hospital emergency unit (EU) in Monrovia, Liberia, to assess clinical and educational outcomes resulting from the implementation of a package of interventions from January 1, 2018, through June 30, 2019. Final analysis was performed in November 2023. Data from a random subset of adult patient encounters were collected retrospectively for the 12 months and compared with all adult patient presentations to the EU during the 6-month program implementation.

Interventions: Triage, standardized documentations, and clinical teaching via a formal curriculum and bedside clinical mentorship.

Main outcomes and measures: The primary outcome was all-cause mortality within 24 hours. Secondary outcomes included mortality at 48 hours, in-EU mortality, and EU quality process indicators. Multivariable logistic regression models were constructed to compare the association between program implementation and all-cause mortality.

Results: A total of 344 preimplementation patients were compared with 1073 patients enrolled during the program with largely similar baseline characteristics between the 2 groups (mean [SD] age, 41.4 [16.4] vs 40.1 [17.3] years: 178 [51.7%] male and 164 [47.7%] female vs 601 [56.0%] male and 472 [44.0%] female; and 163 [47.3%] vs 510 [47.5%] near a hospital). All-cause mortality at 24 and 48 hours was significantly different between the preimplementation and implementation periods (27 [8.3%] vs 40 [3.9%], P < .001, and 34 [10.4%] vs 52 [5.0%], P < .001, respectively). In-EU mortality was significantly different between the 2 groups (13.5% [44 of 327] vs 7.1% [73 of 1031], P < .001). In multivariable regression, the adjusted odds of death at both 24 and 48 hours among patients in the intervention period was half that of the preintervention period.

Conclusions and relevance: This quality improvement study provides evidence that a set of interventions is associated with improved emergency care quality and reduced mortality. The high rates of EU-based mortality suggest the critical need to include EC in all facility-based quality improvement efforts.

Keywords

Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Quality Improvement, Adult, Retrospective Studies, Emergency Service, Hospital, Liberia, Emergency Medical Services, Aged, Hospital Mortality, Triage

Published Open-Access

yes

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