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Tuning a Parallel Segmented Flow Column and Enabling Multiplexed Detection
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How We Implemented A Split Flow Hallway.

Matthew McCartt1, John Ramos1, Lauren Siewny1

  • 1Department of Emergency Medicine, Duke University Hospital, Durham, North Carolina.

The Journal of Emergency Medicine
|March 24, 2026
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Standardized emergency department hallway workflows reduced high-acuity patient exposure and improved safety. Interventions focused on staffing, monitoring, and patient selection, leading to no reported safety incidents.

Keywords:
crowdinghallwayhealth equitytriage

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Area of Science:

  • Emergency Medicine
  • Healthcare Operations
  • Patient Safety

Background:

  • Emergency department (ED) hallway spaces (HS) are increasingly used during overcrowding, posing risks to patient safety, privacy, and equity.
  • High patient volume and acuity at Duke University Hospital (DUH) ED led to frequent HS use for active treatment, with safety reports highlighting issues with critically ill patients in HS.
  • Existing vertical split flow (VSF) strategies improve throughput but safety-focused hallway interventions remain underreported.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To implement and evaluate standardized hallway space (HS) workflows to mitigate safety, privacy, and equity risks.
  • To improve patient care delivery in ED hallway spaces through systematic interventions.
  • To assess the impact of standardized workflows on patient acuity and disposition in HS.

Main Methods:

  • A multidisciplinary team implemented standardized HS workflows using iterative Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles.
  • Interventions included standardized staffing, patient selection criteria, remote monitoring, privacy enhancements, and VSF principles applied to hallway operations.
  • A retrospective analysis of 11,602 adult patient encounters in HS over 53 weeks was conducted.

Main Results:

  • Patients in vertical hallway spaces (HS) were less likely to be high-acuity (IRR 0.68) and less likely to be admitted (IRR 0.30) compared to those in horizontal HS.
  • No hallway space-related safety reports occurred during the intervention period.
  • Standardized workflows and patient selection criteria were successfully implemented for continuous HS utilization.

Conclusions:

  • Standardized hallway workflows and specific patient selection criteria effectively operationalized hallway spaces for continuous use.
  • These interventions significantly reduced the exposure of high-acuity patients to hallway care.
  • The study demonstrates a successful strategy for enhancing safety and efficiency in overcrowded emergency departments.