| Literature DB >> 27069780 |
Russell Hill1, Albert Gest1, Cynthia Smith1, Jose H Guardiola2, Michael Apolinario1, Joann Ha1, Jose R Gonzalez3, Peter B Richman1.
Abstract
Objective. We hypothesized that a significant percentage of patients who are referred to the Emergency Department (ED) after calling their primary care physician's (PCP) office receive such instructions without the input of a physician. Methods. We enrolled a convenience sample of stable adults at an inner-city ED. Patients provided written answers to structured questions regarding PCP contact prior to the ED visit. Continuous data are presented as means ± standard deviation; categorical data as frequency of occurrence. 95% confidence intervals were calculated. Results. The study group of 660 patients had a mean age of 41.7 ± 14.7 years and 72.6% had income below $20,000/year. 472 patients (71.51%; 67.9%-74.8%) indicated that they had a PCP. A total of 155 patients (23.0%; 19.9%-26.4%) called to contact their PCP prior to ED visit. For patients who called their PCP office and were directed by phone to the ED, the referral pattern was observed as follows: 31/98 (31.63%; 23.2%-41.4%) by a non-health care provider without physician input, 11/98 (11.2%; 6.2%-19.1%) by a non-healthcare provider after consultation with a physician, 12/98 (12.3%; 7.7%-20.3%) by a nurse without physician input, and 14/98 (14.3%; 8.6%-22.7%) by a nurse after consultation with physician. An additional 11/98, 11.2%; 6.2-19.1%) only listened to a recorded message and felt the message was directing them to the ED. Conclusion. A relatively small percentage of patients were referred to the ED without the consultation of a physician in our overall population. However, over half of those that contacted their PCP's office felt directed to the ED by non-health care staff.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency department; Primary care referral; Utilization
Year: 2016 PMID: 27069780 PMCID: PMC4824903 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
PCP Office Referral Pattern.
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Mean Age | 41.7 ± 14.7 years |
| % female | 53.8% |
| % less than high school education | 30.0% |
| % less than $20,000 annual income | 72.6% |
| % reporting established PCP | 472 |
Patients who called their PCP office prior to ED visit.
Characteristics of patients who did and did not called primary care physician’s office prior to Emergency Department visit.
| Characteristic | Called PCP before ED visit | Did not call PCP before ED visit | Odds ratio (95% confidence interval) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||
| Female | 80 (22.5) | 275 (77.5) | 0.92 (0.64–1.3) |
| Male | 73 (24.0) | 232 (76.0) | |
| Income | |||
| ≤$20,000/year | 98 (21.7) | 353 (78.3) | 1.2 (0.80–1.8) |
| >$20,000/year | 39 (18.6) | 170 (81.4) | |
| Education | |||
| Less than high school | 47 (23.7) | 151 (76.3) | 0.73 (0.50–1.1) |
| High school or higher | 106 (30.0) | 250 (70.2) |
Notes.
Primary care physician
Emergency Department
Patients who called PCP office and were referred to ED with or without physician consultation (N = 98).
| Source of referral to ED | Doctor consulted | Doctor not consulted |
|---|---|---|
| 11/98 (11.2%) | 31/98 (31.63%) | |
| 14/98 (14.3%) | 12/98 (12.3%) | |
| NA | 11/98 (11.2%) |