Literature DB >> 15615237

[The interest of a short-lived orientation unit in a department of internal medicine].

Sabine Berthier1, Bernard Bonnotte, Aurélie Khau Van Kien, Agnès Deboulard, Eric Benzenine, Marie-Jeanne Bismuth, François Chapuis, Bernard Lorcerie.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the activity of a short-lived orientation unit (SLO) with 9 beds that only receives patients from the emergency department in whom diagnosis and/or specific treatment must be set-up while awaiting a vacant bed in the appropriate medical department.
METHODS: During the 29 months after the creation of the SLO (Feb. 2001 to June 2003), we analysed the parameters supplied every month by the medical computer department: number of patients hospitalized in the SLO, age, gender, principle diagnosis according to the PMSI coded data, duration of hospitalisation, number of deaths, number of releases direct to home, number of transfers to a specialized unit and qualification of the referral units.
RESULTS: 1840 patients (mean age: 73 years) were hospitalized in this unit. The most frequent diseases were bronchopneumonia (16%), syncope episode (14%), cerebral stroke (12%), thromboembolic diseases (11%) and heart failure (10%). The mean duration of hospitalization was 3.7 days (less than 48 hours in 46% of cases). In 40% of cases, patients were able to return directly to their homes. In 62% of cases, the patients were referred to a specialised unit within 48 hours. The functioning of the SLO has various specificities (repeated personalised telephone contacts, letters for rapid transfer, difficult co-operation with certain departments...).
CONCLUSION: The SLO is useful for patients since it accelerates their adapted management and allows quick transfer to the unit adapted to their pathology, permitting correct adequation between the pathologies of the patients and the competence of the specialised medical unit.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15615237     DOI: 10.1016/s0755-4982(04)98916-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Presse Med        ISSN: 0755-4982            Impact factor:   1.228


  1 in total

1.  Morbidity diagnosed in an internal medicine department of a secondary care center (Msaken, Sousse, Tunisia).

Authors:  Mohamed Khelil; Chokri Zoghlami; Imen Horrigue; Dhekra Chebil; Sarra Nouira; Abdelhamid Ben Lakhal; Ahmed Ben Abdelaziz
Journal:  Tunis Med       Date:  2021-01
  1 in total

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