Literature DB >> 25830603

Interhospital Transfer of Neurosurgical Patients to a High-Volume Tertiary Care Center: Opportunities for Improvement.

Christopher M Holland1, Evan W McClure, Brian M Howard, Owen B Samuels, Daniel L Barrow.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Neurosurgical indications for patient transfer include absence of local or available neurosurgical coverage, subspecialty or interdisciplinary requirements, and family preference. Transfer of patients to regional centers will increase with further centralization of medical care.
OBJECTIVE: To report the transfer records of a large tertiary care center to identify trends, failures, and opportunities to improve interhospital transfer of neurosurgical patients.
METHODS: All consecutive, prospectively documented requests for interhospital patient transfer to the adult neurosurgical service of Emory University Hospitals were retrospectively identified from a centralized transfer center database for a 1-year study period.
RESULTS: Requests for neurosurgical care constituted 1323 of the 9087 calls (14.6%); 81.1% of these requests were accepted, and a total of 984 patients (74.4%) arrived at our institutions. Patients arrived from 133 unique facilities throughout a catchment area of 66 287 sq miles. Although the median travel time for transfer patients was 36 minutes, the median interval between the request and patient arrival was 4 hours 2 minutes. The most frequent diagnoses were intracranial hemorrhage (31.8%), subarachnoid hemorrhage (31.2%), and intracranial tumor (15.2%). The overall diagnostic error rate was 10.3%. Only 42.5% of patients underwent neurosurgical intervention, and 57 patients admitted to intensive care were immediately transitioned to a lower level of care.
CONCLUSION: Interhospital transfer requires a coordinated effort among hospital administrators, physicians, and staff to make complex decisions that govern this important and costly process. These data suggest common failures and numerous opportunities for improvement in transfer efficiency, diagnostic accuracy, triage, and resource allocation.

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Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25830603     DOI: 10.1227/NEU.0000000000000752

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurosurgery        ISSN: 0148-396X            Impact factor:   4.654


  3 in total

1.  Identification and Cost of Potentially Avoidable Transfers to a Tertiary Care Neurosurgery Service: A Pilot Study.

Authors:  Elizabeth N Kuhn; Brian A Warmus; Matthew C Davis; Robert A Oster; Barton L Guthrie
Journal:  Neurosurgery       Date:  2016-10       Impact factor: 4.654

2.  The Scope and Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Neuroemergent Patient Transfers, Clinical Care and Patient Outcomes.

Authors:  Josha Woodward; Samuel Meza; Dominick Richards; Lacin Koro; Kevin C Keegan; Krishna C Joshi; Lorenzo F Munoz; Richard W Byrne; Sayona John
Journal:  Front Surg       Date:  2022-06-09

3.  Inter-facility transfer of patients with traumatic intracranial hemorrhage and GCS 14-15: The pilot study of a screening protocol by neurosurgeon to avoid unnecessary transfers.

Authors:  Nima Alan; Song Kim; Nitin Agarwal; Jamie Clarke; Donald M Yealy; Aaron A Cohen-Gadol; Raymond F Sekula
Journal:  J Clin Neurosci       Date:  2020-10-15       Impact factor: 1.961

  3 in total

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