SHORT-TERM UNSCHEDULED RETURN VISITS OF ADULT PATIENTS TO THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT

被引:56
|
作者
Verelst, Sandra [1 ]
Pierloot, Sarah [1 ]
Desruelles, Didier [1 ]
Gillet, Jean-Bernard [1 ]
Bergs, Jochen [1 ]
机构
[1] Katholieke Univ Leuven, Dept Emergency Med, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium
来源
JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE | 2014年 / 47卷 / 02期
关键词
emergency department; return visit; incidence; patient characteristics; crowding; INNER-CITY EMERGENCY; RISK-FACTORS; READMISSIONS; REVISITS; CARE;
D O I
10.1016/j.jemermed.2014.01.016
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Background: Emergency department (ED) crowding is amajor international concern that affects patients and providers. Study Objective: We describe the characteristics of patients who had an unscheduled related return visit to the ED and investigate its relation to ED crowding. Methods: Retrospective medical record review of all unscheduled related ED return visits by patients older than 16 years of age over a 1-year period. The top quartile of ED occupancy rates was defined as ED crowding. Results: Eight hundred thirty-seven patients (1.9%) made an unscheduled related return visit. Length of stay (LOS) at the ED for the index visit and the LOS for the return visit (5 h, 54 min vs. 6 h, 51 min) were significantly different, as were the percent admitted (11.6% vs. 46.1%). Of these patients, 85.1% and 12.0% returned due to persistence or a wrong initial diagnosis, of their initial illness, respectively, and 2.9% returned due to an adverse event related to the treatment initially received. Patients presented the least frequently with an alcohol-related complaint during the index visit (480 patients), but they had the highest number of unscheduled return visits (45 patients; 9.4%). Unscheduled related return visits were not associated with ED crowding. Conclusion: Return visits impose additional pressure on the ED, because return patients have a significantly longer LOS at the ED. However, the rate of unscheduled return visits and ED crowding was not related. Because this parameter serves as an essential quality assurance tool, we can assume that the studied hospital scores well on this particular parameter. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:131 / 139
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [32] Return visits to a pediatric emergency department
    Alessandrini, EA
    Lavelle, JM
    Grenfell, SM
    Jacobstein, CR
    Shaw, KN
    PEDIATRIC EMERGENCY CARE, 2004, 20 (03) : 166 - 171
  • [33] Return visits to a paediatric emergency department
    Cuadrado Piqueras, Laura
    Floriano Ramos, Beatriz
    Gomez Barrena, Virginia
    Campos Calleja, Carmen
    ANALES DE PEDIATRIA, 2017, 87 (01): : 61 - 62
  • [34] Return visits to the paediatric emergency department
    Hollaway, William
    Borland, Meredith L.
    EMERGENCY MEDICINE AUSTRALASIA, 2022, 34 (04) : 584 - 589
  • [35] The Effect of a New Pediatric Emergency Department on Unscheduled Return Visits and Admission Rates: A Before and After Study
    Singer, A. J.
    Stellke, J.
    Kunkov, S.
    Garra, G.
    Thode, H. C., Jr.
    ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2011, 58 (04) : S322 - S322
  • [36] Unscheduled return visits (URV) in adults to the emergency department (ED): a rapid evidence assessment policy review
    Trivedy, Chetan R.
    Cooke, Matthew W.
    EMERGENCY MEDICINE JOURNAL, 2015, 32 (04) : 324 - 329
  • [37] Short-term effects of airborne pollen on emergency department visits for asthma in three Swedish cities
    Meister, Kadri
    Forsberg, Bertil
    EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2014, 44
  • [38] Short-term outcomes in children following emergency department visits for minor injuries sustained at home
    Molloy, Matthew J.
    Shields, Wendy
    Stevens, Molly W.
    Gielen, Andrea C.
    INJURY EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2021, 8 (01)
  • [39] Short-Term Associations Between Coarse PM Levels and Emergency Department Visits for Asthma in Stockholm
    Meister, Kadri
    Forsberg, Bertil
    EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2009, 20 (06) : S114 - S114
  • [40] Short-term Associations between Ambient Air Pollutants and Pediatric Asthma Emergency Department Visits
    Strickland, Matthew J.
    Darrow, Lyndsey A.
    Klein, Mitchel
    Flanders, W. Dana
    Sarnat, Jeremy A.
    Waller, Lance A.
    Sarnat, Stefanie E.
    Mulholland, James A.
    Tolbert, Paige E.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2010, 182 (03) : 307 - 316