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A cross-sectional study of patients presenting to an urban emergency department in Mwanza, Tanzania

Introduction: Tanzania suffers from limited healthcare resources, accentuated by the burden of trauma and infectious diseases. There is limited data on the profile of patients attending Emergency Departments (ED). This study describes patients attending the Bugando Medical Centre, Mwanza, Tanzania E...

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Main Author: Kotecha, Shahzmah Suleman
Other Authors: Hodkinson, Peter
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Division of Emergency Medicine 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kotecha, Shahzmah Suleman
author2 Hodkinson, Peter
author_browse Hodkinson, Peter
Kotecha, Shahzmah Suleman
author_facet Hodkinson, Peter
Kotecha, Shahzmah Suleman
author_sort Kotecha, Shahzmah Suleman
collection Thesis
description Introduction: Tanzania suffers from limited healthcare resources, accentuated by the burden of trauma and infectious diseases. There is limited data on the profile of patients attending Emergency Departments (ED). This study describes patients attending the Bugando Medical Centre, Mwanza, Tanzania ED. Methods: A cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted including all patients presenting from 01 – 31 January 2023. Information collected included demographics, referral status, main complaint, ED disposition, hospital length of stay for admitted patients, and hospital outcomes for admitted patients. Results: A total of 3390 patients presented, and 3224 (98%) were included, of which 49.1 % were male, and the median age was 30 years (interquartile range 12-51). Most (72.9%) were self-referrals. The nature of the complaint for the majority of the patients (61.6%) was medical, and the overall median hospital length of stay was 5 days (IQR of 3-12 days) for admitted patients. Higher proportions (17.3% and 18.9%) of patients presented on Mondays and Tuesdays respectively. Among patients aged 14 years and above, hypertensive heart disease with failure, malignant neoplasm of the oesophagus and intracranial injury were the top medical, surgical and trauma diagnoses respectively. In the paediatric population (<14 years), sickle cell anaemia in crisis, hydrocephalus and diffuse traumatic brain injury were the top medical, surgical and trauma diagnoses respectively. The most common complaints among the patients presenting to the ED were gastrointestinal complaints (8.9%), respiratory complaints (3.1%) and congenital abnormalities (3.2%) in the >14 years, 1-14 years and <1 year age groups respectively. Most (63.6%) patients were discharged directly from the ED, and ED and in-hospital mortality were 0.2% and 15.5% respectively. Conclusion: In this study, we observed a high burden of medical complaints, a high rate of ED discharge and high in-hospital mortality. This study can inform future studies in resource mobilization and allocation for the ED, and the health system.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
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last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:46:54.158Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Division of Emergency Medicine
publisherStr Division of Emergency Medicine
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40994 A cross-sectional study of patients presenting to an urban emergency department in Mwanza, Tanzania Kotecha, Shahzmah Suleman Hodkinson, Peter Cunningham, Charmaine Sawe, Hendry Robert Emergency Department Case-mix Bugando Medical Centre Mwanza Tanzania Introduction: Tanzania suffers from limited healthcare resources, accentuated by the burden of trauma and infectious diseases. There is limited data on the profile of patients attending Emergency Departments (ED). This study describes patients attending the Bugando Medical Centre, Mwanza, Tanzania ED. Methods: A cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted including all patients presenting from 01 – 31 January 2023. Information collected included demographics, referral status, main complaint, ED disposition, hospital length of stay for admitted patients, and hospital outcomes for admitted patients. Results: A total of 3390 patients presented, and 3224 (98%) were included, of which 49.1 % were male, and the median age was 30 years (interquartile range 12-51). Most (72.9%) were self-referrals. The nature of the complaint for the majority of the patients (61.6%) was medical, and the overall median hospital length of stay was 5 days (IQR of 3-12 days) for admitted patients. Higher proportions (17.3% and 18.9%) of patients presented on Mondays and Tuesdays respectively. Among patients aged 14 years and above, hypertensive heart disease with failure, malignant neoplasm of the oesophagus and intracranial injury were the top medical, surgical and trauma diagnoses respectively. In the paediatric population (<14 years), sickle cell anaemia in crisis, hydrocephalus and diffuse traumatic brain injury were the top medical, surgical and trauma diagnoses respectively. The most common complaints among the patients presenting to the ED were gastrointestinal complaints (8.9%), respiratory complaints (3.1%) and congenital abnormalities (3.2%) in the >14 years, 1-14 years and <1 year age groups respectively. Most (63.6%) patients were discharged directly from the ED, and ED and in-hospital mortality were 0.2% and 15.5% respectively. Conclusion: In this study, we observed a high burden of medical complaints, a high rate of ED discharge and high in-hospital mortality. This study can inform future studies in resource mobilization and allocation for the ED, and the health system. 2025-02-20T11:50:38Z 2025-02-20T11:50:38Z 2024 2025-02-20T11:48:41Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40994 en eng application/pdf Division of Emergency Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Emergency Department
Case-mix
Bugando Medical Centre
Mwanza
Tanzania
Kotecha, Shahzmah Suleman
A cross-sectional study of patients presenting to an urban emergency department in Mwanza, Tanzania
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A cross-sectional study of patients presenting to an urban emergency department in Mwanza, Tanzania
title_full A cross-sectional study of patients presenting to an urban emergency department in Mwanza, Tanzania
title_fullStr A cross-sectional study of patients presenting to an urban emergency department in Mwanza, Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed A cross-sectional study of patients presenting to an urban emergency department in Mwanza, Tanzania
title_short A cross-sectional study of patients presenting to an urban emergency department in Mwanza, Tanzania
title_sort cross sectional study of patients presenting to an urban emergency department in mwanza tanzania
topic Emergency Department
Case-mix
Bugando Medical Centre
Mwanza
Tanzania
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40994
work_keys_str_mv AT kotechashahzmahsuleman acrosssectionalstudyofpatientspresentingtoanurbanemergencydepartmentinmwanzatanzania
AT kotechashahzmahsuleman crosssectionalstudyofpatientspresentingtoanurbanemergencydepartmentinmwanzatanzania