How do A&E consultants in England manage patients presenting with atrial fibrillation?
A survey of A&E consultants in England reveals significant variation and some reluctance in initiating acute management and anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation.
We surveyed Accident and Emergency (A 28% would not treat AF acutely but would refer the patient to the medical team; 59% would cardiovert a patient with AF in A however, a minority would still give a rate-limiting calcium antagonist or digoxin. The majority (79%) would not treat AF in a known alcoholic with acute intoxication who was haemodynamically stable. Consultants were more likely to initiate treatment if the patient had signs of shock or heart failure. Where there were underlying medical problems they were more likely to refer the patient directly to the medical team. There was a general reluctance to initiate anticoagulation, and some difference in opinion over how long AF should have persisted for anticoagulation to be necessary in the context of electrical cardioversion. Given the current evolution of A&E as an acute speciality, A&E clinicians should at least initiate management of patients with AF and be prepared to care for them for some time in A&E.
Edwin R. Williams (Thu,) studied this question.