TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantifying the proportion of general practice and low-acuity patients in the emergency department
AU - Nagree, Yusuf
AU - Camarda, Vanessa
AU - Fatovich, Daniel
AU - Cameron, Peter
AU - Dey, Ian
AU - Gosbell, Andrew Donald
AU - McCarthy, Sally
AU - Mountain, David
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Objective: To accurately estimate the proportion of patients presenting to the
emergency department (ED) who may have been suitable to be seen in general
practice.
Design: Using data sourced from the Emergency Department Information
Systems for the calendar years 2009 to 2011 at three major tertiary hospitals in
Perth, Western Australia, we compared four methods for calculating general
practice-type patients. These were the validated Sprivulis method, the widely
used Australasian College for Emergency Medicine method, a discharge diagnosis
method developed by the Tasmanian Department of Human and Health Services,
and the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) method.
Main outcome measure: General practice-type patient attendances to EDs,
estimated using the four methods.
Results: All methods except the AIHW method showed that 10 ?12 of
patients attending tertiary EDs in Perth may have been suitable for general
practice. These attendances comprised 3 ?5 of total ED length of stay.
The AIHW method produced different results (general practice-type patients
accounted for about 25 of attendances, comprising 10 ?11 of total ED
length of stay). General practice-type patient attendances were not evenly
distributed across the week, with proportionally more patients presenting
during weekday daytime (08:00?17:00) and proportionally fewer overnight
(00:00?08:00). This suggests that it is not a lack of general practitioners
that drives patients to the ED, as weekday working hours are the time of
greatest GP availability.
Conclusion: The estimated proportion of general practice-type patients
attending the EDs of Perth?s major hospitals is 10 ?12 , and this accounts
for <5 of the total ED length of stay. The AIHW methodology overestimates
the actual proportion of general practice-type patient attendances.
AB - Objective: To accurately estimate the proportion of patients presenting to the
emergency department (ED) who may have been suitable to be seen in general
practice.
Design: Using data sourced from the Emergency Department Information
Systems for the calendar years 2009 to 2011 at three major tertiary hospitals in
Perth, Western Australia, we compared four methods for calculating general
practice-type patients. These were the validated Sprivulis method, the widely
used Australasian College for Emergency Medicine method, a discharge diagnosis
method developed by the Tasmanian Department of Human and Health Services,
and the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) method.
Main outcome measure: General practice-type patient attendances to EDs,
estimated using the four methods.
Results: All methods except the AIHW method showed that 10 ?12 of
patients attending tertiary EDs in Perth may have been suitable for general
practice. These attendances comprised 3 ?5 of total ED length of stay.
The AIHW method produced different results (general practice-type patients
accounted for about 25 of attendances, comprising 10 ?11 of total ED
length of stay). General practice-type patient attendances were not evenly
distributed across the week, with proportionally more patients presenting
during weekday daytime (08:00?17:00) and proportionally fewer overnight
(00:00?08:00). This suggests that it is not a lack of general practitioners
that drives patients to the ED, as weekday working hours are the time of
greatest GP availability.
Conclusion: The estimated proportion of general practice-type patients
attending the EDs of Perth?s major hospitals is 10 ?12 , and this accounts
for <5 of the total ED length of stay. The AIHW methodology overestimates
the actual proportion of general practice-type patient attendances.
UR - http://goo.gl/pwILss
U2 - 10.5694/mja12.11754
DO - 10.5694/mja12.11754
M3 - Article
SN - 0025-729X
VL - 198
SP - 612
EP - 615
JO - The Medical Journal of Australia
JF - The Medical Journal of Australia
IS - 11
ER -