| Literature DB >> 31349797 |
Marjolein N T Kremers1,2, Prabath W B Nanayakkara3, Marcel Levi4, Derek Bell5, Harm R Haak6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The demand on Emergency Departments and acute medical services is increasing internationally, creating pressure on health systems and negatively influencing the quality of delivered care. Visible consequences of the increased demand on acute services is crowding and queuing. This manifests as delays in the Emergency Departments, adverse clinical outcomes and poor patient experience. OVERVIEW: Despite the similarities in the UK's and Dutch health care systems, such as universal health coverage, there are differences in the number of patients presenting at the Emergency Departments and the burden of crowding between these countries. Given the similarities in funding, this paper explores the similarities and differences in the organisational structure of acute care in the UK and the Netherlands. In the Netherlands, less patients are seen at the ED than in England and the admission rate is higher. GPs and so-called GP-posts serve 24/7 as gatekeepers in acute care, but EDs are heterogeneously organised. In the UK, the acute care system has a number of different access points and the accessibility of GPs seems to be suboptimal. Acute ambulatory care may relieve the pressure from EDs and Acute Medical Units. In both countries the ageing population leads to a changing case mix at the ED with an increased amount of multimorbid patients with polypharmacy, requiring generalistic and multidisciplinary care.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency care; Health care quality; Organisation of care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31349797 PMCID: PMC6660652 DOI: 10.1186/s12873-019-0257-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Numbers and properties of the Dutch and British acute care systems in 2016
| The Netherlands | England | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of EDs per 100,000 people | 0.54c | 0.33 |
| Hospital beds per 1,000 people | 2.4d | 2.6 |
| Percentage of GDP spent on healthcare | 10.6d | 9.9d |
| Available GPs per 10,000 people | 5.8 | 7.6b |
| Number of ED visits per year | 2,400,000 | 15,900,000a |
| ED attendance rate | 14.1 | 24.2a |
| Number of acute admissions per year | 840,000 | 4,300,000 |
| Acute admission rate | 4.9 | 6.6 |
| Percentage of acute admissions for the total ED visits | 35.0 | 27.0a |
aData based on type 1 and 2 Emergency Departments only
b Data retrieved over 2013
c Data retrieved over 2014
d Data retrieved over 2015
Fig. 1The acute care chain in the Netherlands. (Adapted with permission from design by LS van Galen for her thesis “Patient Safety in the Acute Healthcare Chain: is it safer@home?”)
Fig. 2The acute care chain in the UK