| Literature DB >> 23006316 |
Anne-Claire Durand1, Sylvie Palazzolo, Nicolas Tanti-Hardouin, Patrick Gerbeaux, Roland Sambuc, Stéphanie Gentile.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For several decades, overcrowding in emergency departments (EDs) has been intensifying due to the increased number of patients seeking care in EDs. Demand growth is partly due to misuse of EDs by patients who seek care for nonurgent problems. This study explores the reasons why people with nonurgent complaints choose to come to EDs, and how ED health professionals perceive the phenomenon of "nonurgency".Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23006316 PMCID: PMC3515357 DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-5-525
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Questions from interview guide
| 1. Would you describe to me what happened to you today? | |
| | 2. Why did you choose to come to the emergency department today? |
| | 3. Do you have access to an alternative source of care to treat your current problem? |
| | 4. What do you usually do when you are sick? |
| | 5. Do you think that the emergency department is the most appropriate place to treat your current health care problem? |
| | |
| 1. Would you describe the patients who present to the emergency department for nonurgent complaints? | |
| | 2. In your opinion, why do nonurgent patients choose to come to the emergency department rather than their family practitioner? |
| | 3. What are the consequences of such nonurgent visits? |
| 4. Do you have any solutions to limit nonurgent ED visits? |
Reasons for ED use for nonurgent patients: category descriptions
| To alleviate pain or discomfort | ▪ “It’s urgent because it hurts” |
| | ▪ “I suffered for a while there. I’ve been trying to tough it out, but I suffer too much.” |
| Anxiety generated by the complaint | ▪ “I don’t consider my problem serious, but I am worried because I am hurting.” |
| | ▪ “I do not know what I have, but it worried me, so I preferred to come immediately to the ED so at least I am reassured.” |
| | ▪ “I was afraid; I was concerned because I did not know if my problem was serious.” |
| Difficulty obtaining an appointment with their PCP in a timely manner | ▪ “When I called my doctor, he said that he was booked up, and he instructed me to go to the ED.” |
| | ▪ “It is impossible to see him during the week if you are sick (speaking of her PCP). It is too long.” |
| | ▪ “I called my doctor but he could not see me, so I preferred to come to the ED because the pain was unbearable.” |
| ED is the only alternative to accommodate work schedules | ▪ “When I am sick and miss a day of work, I need to see a doctor that day. I can’t afford to be off work any longer. I need to feel better and go back to work the next day” |
| | ▪ “After 6 p.m., nothing else is open.” |
| Discerning health consumers | ▪ “I preferred the ED to my doctor because it is so hard to get in to see him.” |
| | ▪ “I knew that my doctor could not see me. So, I came to the ED.” |
| | ▪ “My doctor consults by appointment only. He doesn’t have time for me.” |
| Availability of diagnostic tests and treatment | ▪ “My doctor cannot do X-rays or laboratory tests, while the ED has all the technical support.” |
| | ▪ “I'd rather be here than run around. At least here x-rays can be done.” |
| Convenience | ▪ “Everything is in one place.” |
| ▪ “The doctors perform things a lot faster.” | |
Perceptions of ED health professionals regarding nonurgent ED patients
| No specific definition | ▪ “It’s easy to consider a nonurgent case at the end of the consultation, but it's very difficult in the triage area.” |
| Perception of what constitutes a nonurgent case | ▪ “Anything that is not life-threatening.” |
| | ▪ “A condition is nonurgent if it can be treated in 2 to 3 days.” |
| | ▪ “Consultations are nonurgent if the chief complaint is a non-serious illness that can be treated by a PCP.” |
| Difference between nonurgent cases and inappropriate cases | ▪ “If no other sources of care are available, patients have no other choice but to go to the ED. In this case, a nonurgent consultation could be considered appropriate.” |
| | ▪ “All patients whose care can be given at a facility other than the ED.” |
| | ED, and what is inappropriate, but it is very difficult to define.” |
| Lack of access to PCPs | ▪ “PCPs are not available evenings and weekends…” |
| | ▪ “Continuity of care in primary care services is not guaranteed on Saturdays and Sundays.” |
| | ▪ “In some geographical sectors, there is virtually no primary health care structure ensuring continuity of care. EDs are the only medical places available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.” |
| Health care consumerism | ▪ “The use of care is similar to that of products, i.e. fast and easy… We are in the Internet age, where everything is readily available, and the use of health care is no exception to this trend.” |
| | ▪ “The population evolves towards the need for rapid response to a need.” |
| | ▪ “People want to receive care on the same day, including access to technical facilities.” |
| | ▪ “Frustration is not acceptable”. |
| No advance payment at the time of the ED visit | ▪ “Some patients come to EDs for financial reasons. There is a perception that the hospital is free, but it is not.” |
| | ▪ “People believe that the medical consultation is free at the time of the ED visit, but the consultation is supported by our health insurance system.” |
| | ▪ “It is a problem when there are peaks of activity…This increase in utilization of EDs has induced overcrowding, prolonged wait times, delayed diagnosis and treatments, reduced quality of care, and increased the risk of adverse outcomes.” |
| | ▪ “Most ED colleagues are stressed because EDs are not structured for primary care.” |
| | ▪ “They (ED colleagues) feel that they no longer practice emergency medicine.” |
| Patient education | ▪ “We should communicate more about what is a real urgent problem.” |
| | ▪ “Perhaps if people were educated regarding the importance of primary care and the appropriate use of EDs, they might seek ED care less often.” |
| To reorganize the health care system by improving the continuity of care outside regular business hours | ▪ “We could have primary care consultations in close proximity to the ED. These consultations would be opened between 8 a.m. and midnight. When there is a real emergency, patients would be sent back to the ED.” |
| | ▪ “A working collaboration between EDs and PCPs would improve accessibility to ensure that services are used effectively and efficiently.” |
| To integrate a “gatekeeper” at the ED | “To determine patients having authorization for care in ED, a physician should discern whether the consultation is appropriate or not.” |
| A financial penalty for patients categorized as nonurgent after the consultation | ▪ “If it’s not urgent, we look after you, but you will pay - you will pay at least an “emergency fee”; |
| ▪ “No significant financial penalties to prevent the use of EDs exist.” | |