# Epidemiology and Outcomes of Patients Presenting to United States Emergency Departments with Vaginal Bleeding

**Authors:** Jake Mooney, Emily Shearer, Shay Strauss, Chuyun Xu, Janette Baird, Siraj Amanullah

PMC · DOI: 10.5811/westjem.49015 · 2026-02-03

## TL;DR

This study examines the patterns and outcomes of U.S. emergency department visits for vaginal bleeding, finding most patients are discharged but some risk factors exist.

## Contribution

The study provides the first comprehensive analysis of ED visits for vaginal bleeding in the U.S., revealing epidemiological trends and triage limitations.

## Key findings

- Most patients with vaginal bleeding in EDs had low-severity outcomes and were discharged home.
- High-severity cases had higher shock indices and shorter wait times despite similar triage scores.
- Disparities in presentation were observed, with fewer White and more Hispanic patients presenting with vaginal bleeding.

## Abstract

There are significant gaps in knowledge regarding the epidemiology, management, and outcomes of patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with vaginal bleeding.

This was a retrospective, successional cross-sectional study using data from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) examining all adult patients presenting to EDs with vaginal bleeding from 2011–2019. Patients were stratified by age, race/ethnicity, and pregnancy status. Main outcomes were ultimate outcome severity, presenting vital signs, and diagnostic tests performed. We defined high-severity outcome as any patient who was dead on arrival, died in the ED, or during that hospitalization; any patient admitted to the intensive care or stepdown units or to the cardiac catheterization lab or the operating room; or patients transferred to a non-psychiatric hospital. Moderate severity was defined as any patient admitted to floor-level care, held in observation, or transferred to a psychiatric hospital. We defined low-severity outcome as any patient discharged home.

Patients presenting with a chief complaint of vaginal bleeding comprised 1.3% (95% CI, 1.2–1.4%,) of all ED visits, representing 14,620,933 total encounters. Of these patients, 53.0% (95% CI, 49.4–56.7%) were identified as pregnant. There was a lower prevalence of White patients presenting with this complaint compared to White patients presenting with any chief complaint (45.6% [95% CI, 41.9–49.4] vs 60.3% [95% CI, 57.7–62.8%]), with a reciprocal higher prevalence of Hispanic patients (21.1% [95% CI,17.7–24.5%] vs 13.2% [95% CI, 11.7–14.8%]). The majority of patients (88.1%, 95% CI, 86.1–90%) were classified as having a low-severity outcome, 10.3% (95% CI, 8.5–12.1%) were classified as moderate-severity, and 1.6% (95% CI,1.0–2.2%) as high-severity. Patients who were ultimately classified with high-severity outcomes had significantly higher shock indices at presentation and shorter wait times than patients with low-severity outcomes (0.75 [95% CI, 0.72–0.78] vs 0.68 [95% CI, 0.67–0.69], and 23.4 minutes [95% CI, 17.1–29.8] vs 41.7 minutes [95% CI, 37.1–46.4], respectively), despite no difference in median Emergency Severity Index triage score (2.5 [IQR 2.1–2.8] v 2.6 [IQR 2.2–2.9]). A quarter of patients (24.3% [95% CI, 20.8–27.7%]) received a pelvic exam: there were no significant differences in pelvic exam rate by age, pregnancy status, race/ethnicity, or ultimate outcome severity.

Although most patients presenting to EDs with vaginal bleeding are discharged home, current triage models do not appear to appropriately risk-stratify higher risk patients. Disparities in presentation exist.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** shock (MESH:D012769), psychiatric (MESH:D001523), Vaginal Bleeding (MESH:D014592), dead (MESH:D001926)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13016043