| Literature DB >> 25874866 |
Lesley J J Soril1, Laura E Leggett1, Diane L Lorenzetti2, Tom W Noseworthy1, Fiona M Clement1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to establish the effectiveness of interventions to reduce frequent emergency department (ED) use among a general adult high ED-use population.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25874866 PMCID: PMC4395429 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0123660
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA Flow Diagram.
A total of 1491 abstracts were identified from the electronic database search. After removal of duplicate records, 1029 abstracts were reviewed and 952 were excluded. Hand-searching of the references lists of relevant systematic reviews identified 4 additional full-text articles. Eighty-one articles in all were assessed in full-text, of which 64 were excluded and 17 studies (4 randomized controlled trials; 13 comparative cohort studies), within 3 intervention categories (care or case management; individualized care plans; information sharing), were included for final qualitative synthesis. Heterogeneity in the reported outcomes prohibited pooling of data for meta-analysis.
Characteristics of Included Studies.
| Author (Year) Country | Journal | Health Care Setting | Study Population | Type of Control | Number of Participants | Definition of Frequent User | Type of Intervention | Health Professionals involved in Intervention | Quality Assessment/ Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Eur J Emerg Med | One large urban hospital ED | Patients with | Randomly assigned controls | Control: | Patients with 3 or more ED visits in the last 12 months |
| ED Physicians, primary care providers | Medium Risk of Bias |
|
| Eur J Emerg Med | One large urban hospital ED | Patients with | Randomly assigned controls | Control: | Three or more visits in 3 months |
| Nurses | Medium Risk of Bias |
|
| Am J Emerg Med | One urban public hospital ED | Patients seen in ED | Randomly assigned controls | Control: | Patients with 5–11 ED visits in 12 months |
| Psychiatric social workers | Medium Risk of Bias |
|
| Acad Emerg Med | Seven hospital EDs | Adult patients with | Randomly assigned controls | Control: | Ten or more ED visits in 12 months |
| ED physician, social worker, psychiatrist | Medium Risk of Bias |
|
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| Hong Kong J Emerg Med | One large urban hospital ED | Patients seen in the ED ≥ 3 times within 72 hours cases were divided into the pain management or chronic disease group according to their chief complaint. | Patients were used as their own controls (historical control) | Control: | Three or more ED visits within a 72-hour period in a month |
| ED physicians, primary care physicians, psychiatrists, social workers, and pharmacologists | 14/26 |
|
| The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine | One not-for-profit hospital ED | Patients with low income who visited the ED | Total sample population used as control group | Control: | Six or more visits to ED in 12 months |
| Family Physician, nurse care manger, behavioural health providers | 17/26 |
|
| J Public Health Med | One large urban hospital ED | Patients with low income who visited the ED | All patients eligible for study who were not in intervention group | Control: | Ten or more visits to ED in 12 months |
| Primary care providers, hospital-based coordinator, in-person or telephone access to community health worker | 20/26 |
|
| Aust N Z J Public Health | One urban hospital ED | Patients who consistently used public hospital EDs | Patients were used as their own controls (historical control) | Control: | No definition given |
| Social workers, nurses | 15/26 |
|
| The Health Care Manager | One ED in a teaching hospital | Patients with | Patients were used as their own controls (historical control) | Control: | More than 3 visits to ED in one month |
| Social workers, case managers, primary care physicians | 19/26 |
|
| J Emerg Med | One regional hospital ED | Patients with ≥ 3 ED visits in past 12 months | Patients were used as their own controls (historical control) | Control: | Three to eleven ED visits in 12 months pre-enrollment |
| Physicians, nurses, mental-health and substance-abuse professionals, ED nurse managers, a pharmacist, a social worker, a chaplain | 19/26 |
|
| Am J Emerg Med | One urban hospital ED | Convenience sample of frequent ED users ( | Patients were used as their own controls (historical control) | Control: | Five or more visits in 12 months |
| Psychiatric social worker, case manager, primary care physician | 18/26 |
|
| N Z Med J | One urban hospital ED | Patients with | Control group from Kennedy et al.[ | Control: | Ten or more visits to ED in 12 months |
| Nurse, general practitioners, ED staff, psychiatric services, social workers, medical specialists | 15/26 |
|
| Med J Aust | One urban hospital ED | Patients with | Patients were used as their own controls (historical control) | Control: | Six or more visits to ED in 12 months |
| Nurses, allied health professionals, psychiatry, primary care providers | 19/26 |
|
| CMAJ | One downtown hospital ED | Patient with frequent ED service use, in addition to violent behaviour and/or, drug-seeking behaviour and/or having a chronic medical condition | Patients were used as their own controls (historical control) | Control: | No definition given |
| Social workers, ED medical director, director of continuous quality improvement, patient care manager, psychiatric nurse, clinical nurse specialist, family physicians, community care providers | 18/26 |
|
| Med Care | One hospital ED | Low income, uninsured adults who are frequent ED users (≥ 4 ED visits in 12 months) | Controls from the same patient population | Control: |
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| Case managers, Primary care providers | 21/26 |
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| Emerg Med J | One urban hospital ED | Patients with high ED use | Controls from the same patient population | Control: | Ten or more visits in 6 months |
| Clinical nurse specialist, psychiatrist, ED specialist registrar, ED consultant, social workers, housing officers | 16/26 |
|
| West J Emerg Med | One urban hospital ED | Patients with high ED use | Patients were used as their own controls (historical control) | Control: | No definition given |
| ED attending physician, Medical social worker, Mental health social worker, psychologist, medical resident, clinical nurse specialist, student volunteer | 20/26 |
*Same participants in the control and exposed groups (historical controls);
Risk of bias assessed using the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool;
†Quality assessed using the Downs and Black Checklist
Reported Outcomes of Frequent User Interventions Among Included Studies.
| Authors | Type of Intervention | Control Group | Intervention Group | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of ED Visits Before (mean per year) | Number of ED Visits After (mean per year) | Change in Mean Number of ED Visits | Number of ED Visits Before Intervention (mean per year) | Number of ED Visits After Intervention (mean per year) | Change in Mean Number of ED Visits | ||
|
| |||||||
| Hansagi[ | Information Sharing | 6 | 3.9 | -2.1 | 6.2 | 4 | -2.2 |
| Reinius[ | Case management | 5 | 6.4 | +1.4 | 5 | 4.9 | -0.1 |
| Shumway[ | Case management | 5.2 | 2.9 | -2.3 | 3.6 | 1.4 | -2.2 |
| Spillane[ | Individual care plan | 13 | 6 | -7 | 14 | 7 | -7 |
|
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| Chiang[ | Case management | - | - | - | 63 | 26 | -37 |
| Crane[ | Case management | 6.96 | 5.04 | -1.92 | 6.96 | 2.76 | -4.2 |
| Dehaven[ | Individual care plan | - | 1.44 | - | - | 0.93 | - |
| Grimmer-Somers[ | Individual care plan | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Lee[ | Case management | - | - | - | 8.92 | 8.26 | -0.66 |
| Murphy[ | Case management | - | - | - | 7 | 2 | -5 |
| Okin[ | Case Management | - | - | - | 15 | 9 | -6 |
| Peddie[ | Case Management | - | 14.6 | - | - | 17.1 | - |
| Phillips[ | Case Management | - | - | - | 10.16 | 12.95 | +2.79 |
| Pope[ | Case management | - | - | - | 26.5 | 6.5 | -20 |
| Shah[ | Care management | - | - | - | 6 | 1.7 | -4.3 |
| Skinner[ | Case management | - | - | - | 12 | 6 | -6 |
| Stokes-Buzzelli[ | Information Sharing | - | - | - | 67.4 | 50.5 | -16.9 |
*Median reported;
6 month time period
Health System Costs of Frequent ED Use and/or Interventions.
| Author | Country | Intervention Type | Number of Included Participants | Cost of Intervention | Hospital Charges Before Intervention (per patient) | Hospital Charges After Intervention (per patient) | Change in Hospital Charges (per patient) | Change in Total Hospital Charges |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||
| Shumway[ | United States | Case management | Control group: | $606,711 ($3,633 per patient) | Intervention Group: $11,805 Control Group: $10,020 | Intervention Group: $14,921 Control Group: $16,679 | Intervention Group: $3,116 Control Group: $6,659 | - |
| Reinius[ | Sweden | Case management | Control group: | - | - | Intervention Group: €6,355 Control Group: €19,044 | - | - |
|
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| Crane[ | United States | Case management | Control group: | $66,000 ($1,833 per patient) | $1,167 | $230 | -$937 | - |
| Dehaven[ | United States | Individualized care plan | Control group: | - | $1188 | $446 | -$742 | - |
| Grimmer-Somers[ | Australia | Individualized care plan | Control group: | $63,434 ($1,714 per patient) | - | - | - | - |
| Murphy[ | United States | Case management | Control group: | $265,680 | $2,328 | $1,043 | -$1,285 | -$142,809 |
| Okin[ | United States | Case management | Control group: | $296,738 ($5,599 per patient) | $12,454 | $4,981 | -$7,473 | -$429,464 |
| Shah[ | United States | Care management | Control group: | - | $2,545 | $1,874 | -$671 | |
| Stokes-Buzzelli[ | United States | Information sharing | Control group: | - | - | - | -$15,513 | - |
*Median reported;
ED charges only;
†In Australian Dollars.