Title of article :
A Health Records Review of Outpatient Referrals from the Emergency Department
Author/Authors :
Prudhomme, Nicholas Department of Emergency Medicine - University of Ottawa - Ottawa - ON - Canada , H. Kwok, Edmund S Department of Emergency Medicine - University of Ottawa - Ottawa - ON - Canada , Olejnik, Laura Department of Emergency Medicine - University of Ottawa - Ottawa - ON - Canada , Thiruganasambandamoorthy, Venkatesh Ottawa Hospital Research Institute - the Ottawa Hospital - Ottawa - ON - Canada - Department of Emergency Medicine - University of Ottawa - Ottawa - ON - Canada
Pages :
7
From page :
1
To page :
7
Abstract :
Objectives. Many patients discharged home from the emergency department (ED) require urgent outpatient consultation with a specialty service. We sought to identify the best- and worst-performing services with regard to time to outpatient consultation, the proportion of patients lost to follow-up, the rate of related return ED visits prior to consultation, and common strategies used by our top-performing clinics. Methods. We conducted a health records review of 'e Ottawa Hospital ED visits during four 1-week periods. All consecutive adult outpatient consultation requests were included for chart review and were followed up to 12 months. Outcome measures included demographics, referral attendance rates, incomplete referrals, return ED visits, and time intervals. Services with at least 15 consultation requests were included for data analysis and qualitative mapping of their referral processes. Results. Of the 963 patients who met inclusion criteria, 803 (83.4%) attended their appointment, while 160 (16.6%) were lost to follow-up. 'e overall median time to successful consultation was 9 days (IQR � 2–27). 92 (9.6%) patients returned to the ED with a related complaint. 'e top-performing clinics included ophthalmology, orthopedics, and thrombosis (median � 1, 8, 1 days; incomplete consultation � 3%, 4%, 6%; return ED visits � 0%, 6%, 2% respectively). 'e bottom-performing clinics included otorhinolaryngology, neurology, and gynecology (median � 47, 39, 27 days; incomplete consultation � 50%, 41%, 37%; return ED visits � 11%, 15%, 26%, respectively). Processes incorporated by top-performing clinics included reserving appointment slots for emergency referrals, structured referral forms, and centralized booking. Conclusions. We found a substantial variability in both the waiting times and reliability of outpatient referrals from the ED. Top-performing clinics incorporate common referral processes.
Keywords :
Health , Outpatient Referrals , Emergency Department
Journal title :
Emergency Medicine International
Serial Year :
2019
Full Text URL :
Record number :
2606779
Link To Document :
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