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QJM Advance Access originally published online on October 17, 2006
QJM 2006 99(11):771-781; doi:10.1093/qjmed/hcl112
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© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Association of Physicians. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

The Simple Clinical Score predicts mortality for 30 days after admission to an acute medical unit

J. Kellett and B. Deane

From the Nenagh Hospital, Nenagh, Ireland

Address correspondence to Dr J. Kellett, Department of Medicine, Nenagh Hospital, Nenagh, County Tipperary, Ireland. email: jgkellett{at}eircom.net

Received 17 April 2006 and in revised form 3 July 2006

Background: Predictive scores such as APACHE II and SAPS II have been used to assess patients in intensive care units, but only the modified early warning (MEW) score has been used to assess acutely ill general medical patients.

Design: Observational study of predictors of mortality.

Setting: Small Irish rural hospital.

Methods: From 17 February 2000 to 29 January 2004, 9964 consecutive patients admitted as acute medical emergencies were divided into a derivation cohort of 6736 patients and a validation cohort of 3228 patients.

Results: In the derivation cohort, 316 patients (4.7%) died within 30 days of hospital admission. Under univariate analysis, age, vital signs and 18 categorical variables were associated with increased risk of death, and nine with reduced risk. Logistic regression identified 16 independent predictors of 30-day mortality, from which the Simple Clinical Score was derived, stratifying patients into five risk classes. In each class, mortality was not significantly different between the derivation and validation cohorts: 0–0.1% for very low risk, 1.5–1.6% for low risk, 3.8–3.9% for average risk, 9.0–10.3% for high risk, and 29.2–34.4% for very high risk.

Discussion: The Simple Clinical Score quickly and accurately identifies patients at both a low and high risk of death from the first to the 30th day after admission, enabling prompt triage and placement within a health-care facility.


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B. Silke, J. Kellett, T. Rooney, K. Bennett, and D. O'Riordan
An improved medical admissions risk system using multivariable fractional polynomial logistic regression modelling
QJM, October 21, 2009; (2009) hcp149v1.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]



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