Associations between day of admission, admission hyponatremia and hospital outcomes in medical patients: A retrospective multicenter cohort study
Rajkumar Rajendram, Abdullah Abdulrahman AlShamrani, Ali Muhammad Alqaraishi

TL;DR
This study finds that hospital admission day and low sodium levels on admission are linked to longer hospital stays and other outcomes in medical patients.
Contribution
The study identifies specific day-of-admission effects and their interaction with hyponatremia severity on hospital outcomes.
Findings
Friday admissions had the longest hospital stays, while Mondays had the shortest.
Hyponatremia on admission was associated with longer hospital stays across most admission days.
Admission during the COVID-19 period was linked to increased mortality.
Abstract
We investigated the relationship between admission day, serum sodium concentration, and outcomes in medical inpatients. Hyponatremia, the most common electrolyte abnormality in hospitalized adults, is associated with prolonged hospital length of stay (LOS) and higher mortality. Weekend admissions are also linked to worse outcomes, but the magnitude of this “weekend effect” may vary with diagnoses and particular day of admission. Retrospective multicenter cohort study. Four Ministry of National Guard – Health Affairs hospitals in Saudi Arabia (January 1, 2016 – May 9, 2022). 43,361 adult medical admissions. Patients with hypernatremia (n = 1,892) or LOS > 30 days (n = 2,988) were excluded. Admissions were categorized by admission day (Sunday – Saturday) and serum sodium concentration (normonatremia and hyponatremia with severity sub-classification). LOS, intensive therapy unit (ITU)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrolyte and hormonal disorders · Biomedical and Chemical Research · Cardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical Outcomes
