Overcoming Barriers in the Introduction of Early Warning Scores for Prevention of In-Hospital Cardiac Arrests in Austrian Medical Centers †
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Quantitative Methods
2.2.1. Subjects
2.2.2. Collection of Quantative Data
2.2.3. Variable Distribution
2.3. Qualitative Methods
- (1)
- Ninety-three standard hospitals providing basic healthcare services;
- (2)
- Twenty-eight specialized hospitals providing an extended range of medical services beyond basic care;
- (3)
- Seven central hospitals offering comprehensive care 24/7 for acute and complex medical needs.
2.3.1. Selection of Participants
2.3.2. Collection of Qualitative Data
2.3.3. Qualitative Analysis
2.4. Integration of Quantitative and Qualitative Data
2.5. Ethics
3. Results
3.1. Local Data Regarding IHCA in Innsbruck
3.2. Data from the Guided Interviews
3.3. Structure of In-Hospital Emergency Medicine in Austria
“We are operating within that magnitude. Approximately half and half: anesthesiologists and internists.” (interview 1, line 279, consultant lead for in-hospital emergency medicine, board-certified specialist in anesthesiology and intensive care medicine, specialized hospital)
“We have alert criteria, if you want to call them that. These were taken from Hillman’s work around 2000 or 2001. They’ve been tested since 2010 and have been in use since 2012. They’re what you call ‘single track and trigger’ systems.” (interview 4, line 61ff, critical care nurse, in-hospital emergency management coordination unit, central hospital)
3.4. Barriers to the Implementation of EWS
“I think it mainly fails because of nursing staff, simply because there isn’t enough capacity to check on every patient on the general ward once an hour or so. They’re just, probably everywhere, really at their limit.” (interview 9, line 238ff, board-certified specialist in anesthesiology and intensive care medicine, clinical responsibilities in in-hospital emergency medicine, central hospital)
“Another important aspect is the academization of nursing which was certainly not a beneficial development. Experience and clinical intuition remain essential to recognize a deteriorating patient.” (interview 8, line 160ff, head of department of anesthesiology, board-certified specialist in anesthesiology and intensive care medicine, specialized hospital)
“It is important—indeed absolutely essential—that hospital staff possess certain knowledge and skill, especially in an acute care hospital. I believe that for quality assurance reasons, there is no way around maintaining a low-threshold access, and also offering regular training sessions.” (interview 4, line 225ff)
3.5. Best Practice Tutorial
- Innovation domain
“We do not use either MEWS or NEWS. They were temporarily used in one unit, but that happened to be an IMCU ward—essentially an environment for which these scores were neither intended nor designed. Consequently, they are no longer used there.”(interview 2, line 111ff, board-certified specialist in anesthesiology and intensive care medicine, clinical responsibilities in in-hospital emergency medicine, central hospital)
“Nursing staff is glad to have a structured concept in place, so they can say: you need to take care of this patient now because I have documented this value.” (interview 6, line 190ff, physician-in-charge of ICU, board-certified specialist in anesthesiology and intensive care medicine, responsible for the in-hospital emergency team, central hospital)
“Yes, but even the ward physician can be overwhelmed, because nowadays the spectrum of illnesses that patients bring with them is simply much broader.” (interview 10, line 277f, critical care nurse, intermediate care unit, department of orthopedic and trauma surgery, central hospital)
- 2.
- Outer Setting domain
- Process Management
“If people don’t exceed their maximum working hours, they can sign up for as many trainings as they want. That counts as working time, these are the costs.” (interview 5, line 3119ff, head of the emergency department, board-certified specialist in internal medicine, specialized hospital)
- b.
- Quality Management
“We are members of the German Resuscitation Registry. We document our emergencies using a protocol provided by the German Resuscitation Registry. Two of my senior physicians consistently enter the data into the database. We thoroughly review the annual report and implement appropriate measures based on its findings.” (interview 7, line 149ff, head of department of anesthesiology, board-certified specialist in anesthesiology and intensive care medicine, specialized hospital)
- c.
- Hospital Management
“Based on my impression, there would be a willingness to invest a certain amount of money if, an early warning system were to be implemented. This requires training, which incurs costs primarily due to the time spent on duty. I do believe such a willingness exists.” (interview 3, line 200ff, consultant lead for in-hospital emergency medicine, board-certified specialist in anesthesiology and intensive care medicine, specialized hospital)
- d.
- Society
“And if such a requirement is centrally mandated by the ministry, it makes implementation significantly easier.” (interview 6, line 292f)
- 3.
- Inner Setting domain
“As a responder, one must have rapid and clear access to all relevant information. I require a well-organized overview of the patient’s condition over the preceding thirty minutes, which, of course, further supports the adoption of electronic solutions.” (interview 7, line 209ff)
- 4.
- Individual domain
- a.
- Emergency patients
- b.
- Alerting staff
“I would suggest lowering the threshold—that is, encouraging the staff to call whenever they have a concerning gut feeling.” (interview 1, line 221ff)
“[…] What’s still essential is experience and clinical intuition—being able to tell if someone is unwell or has a problem. You only learn that by spending a lot of time directly with patients.” (interview 8, line 160ff)
- c.
- Emergency Teams [Deployed staff]
“What should be avoided is a sudden increase in unjustified or non-indicated alerts. This would likely lead responders to start questioning the system as a whole.” (interview 3, line 178ff)
- 5.
- Implementation process domain
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CCO | Critical care outreach |
CPR | Cardiopulmonary resuscitation |
ERC | European Resuscitation Council |
EWS | Early Warning Score |
ICU | Intensive care unit |
IHCA | In-hospital cardiac arrest |
ILCOR | International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation |
ROSC | Return of spontaneous circulation |
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Characteristic | Number of Participants | |
---|---|---|
Sex | Female | 1 |
Male | 9 | |
Age | 31–40 years | 2 |
41–50 years | 5 | |
51–60 years | 2 | |
>60 years | 1 | |
Working experience | ≤3 years | 0 |
4–7 years | 0 | |
8–15 years | 2 | |
>16 years | 8 | |
Experience in in-hospital emergency medicine | 3–5 years | 1 |
6–8 years | 0 | |
9–11 years | 3 | |
>12 years | 6 | |
Profession | Nurse practitioner | 2 |
Doctor | 8 | |
Hospital beds at occupation of the participant | >500 beds | 4 |
>1000 beds | 6 |
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Treml, B.; Dahlmann, P.; Rajsic, S.; Bauernfeind, L. Overcoming Barriers in the Introduction of Early Warning Scores for Prevention of In-Hospital Cardiac Arrests in Austrian Medical Centers. Healthcare 2025, 13, 2624. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13202624
Treml B, Dahlmann P, Rajsic S, Bauernfeind L. Overcoming Barriers in the Introduction of Early Warning Scores for Prevention of In-Hospital Cardiac Arrests in Austrian Medical Centers. Healthcare. 2025; 13(20):2624. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13202624
Chicago/Turabian StyleTreml, Benedikt, Philipp Dahlmann, Sasa Rajsic, and Lydia Bauernfeind. 2025. "Overcoming Barriers in the Introduction of Early Warning Scores for Prevention of In-Hospital Cardiac Arrests in Austrian Medical Centers" Healthcare 13, no. 20: 2624. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13202624
APA StyleTreml, B., Dahlmann, P., Rajsic, S., & Bauernfeind, L. (2025). Overcoming Barriers in the Introduction of Early Warning Scores for Prevention of In-Hospital Cardiac Arrests in Austrian Medical Centers. Healthcare, 13(20), 2624. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13202624