Trends in older adults boarding in US EDs
Natalia Sifnugel, Daniel Cruz, Molly Jeffery, Rohit Sangal, Brendan Carr, Scott Dresden, Cameron Gettel, Ula Hwang

TL;DR
This study shows that older adults, especially those aged 85 and older, experience high rates of emergency department boarding, which can lead to serious health risks.
Contribution
The study reveals that the oldest adults face the highest and fastest-growing rates of ED boarding across multiple healthcare systems.
Findings
Patients aged 85 and older had the highest boarding rates in two of the three systems studied.
Boarding rates increased over time in all systems, with the most significant rise in the ≥85 age group in one system.
Approximately half of older adults experienced ED boarding, with the most vulnerable facing the greatest exposure.
Abstract
Inpatient boarding (holding patients in the emergency department [ED] while awaiting an inpatient bed) is associated with increased risk of delirium, medication safety events, and hospital mortality in older adults. We investigated boarding trends across age strata to determine if older patients had elevated rates compared to younger patients. Administrative data for ED encounters resulting in admission from 3 healthcare systems (2 Midwest, 1 Northeast) from 1/1/19 to 12/31/24 were reviewed. Age was categorized by strata: < 21, 21-64, 65-74, 75-84, and ≥ 85. Based on the CMS Age Friendly Hospital Measures, the proportion of patients boarding for 3+ hours was calculated within each year and age strata. Boarding rates varied substantially by system and age group. At Systems 1 (S1) and 3 (S3), ≥ 85 patients had the highest rates (S1: 54.9%, S3: 70.9% in 2024) and, at System 2 (S2), all…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmergency and Acute Care Studies · Frailty in Older Adults · Geriatric Care and Nursing Homes
