| Literature DB >> 31511009 |
Steve Thomas1, Conor Foley2, Bridget Kane2, Bridget M Johnston2, Brenda Lynch2, Susan Smith3, Orla Healy2, Elsa Droog2, John Browne2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A key challenge for most systems is how to provide effective access to urgent and emergency care across rural and urban populations. Tensions about the placement and scope of hospital emergency services are longstanding in Irish political life and there has been recent reform to centralise hospital services in some regions. The focus of this paper is a system approach to examine the geographic variation in resourcing and utilisation of such care across GP practices, out-of-hours care, ambulance services, Emergency Departments and Local Injury Units in Ireland.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency care; Health system; Ireland; Resource allocation; Universal health care; Urgent care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31511009 PMCID: PMC6737720 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4504-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Operational regions of Ireland (2014)
Reconfiguration of emergency care systems in Ireland
| Region | Characteristicsa | Summary of regional changes |
|---|---|---|
North East (Cavan, Meath, Louth and Monaghan) | Population: 440,211 Area (km2): 6395 | • Region-specific reconfiguration plan partly implemented from 2006 to 2010. • Two emergency departments reconfigured to local injury units. • Some centralisation of trauma, acute stroke and coronary care (to Cavan and Louth) with rehab support in other hospitals. • Mater [Dublin North] is the percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) centre with supporting ambulance protocols. • Roll-out of general practitioner (GP) out of hours care. • Limited regional clinical governance. |
Dublin North East (Fingal, Dublin North City) | Population: 578,317 Area (km2): 532 | • No major changes. • Three large emergency departments with limited governance integration and differentiation of services (PCI centre at Mater [Dublin North]). • Out of hours GP co-operative established. |
Dublin South (Dublin South City, Dun Laoghaire Rathdown, Wicklow) | Population: 563,560 Area (km2): 2168 | • One emergency department reconfigured to local injury unit in 2013, with reduced hours in another. • Centralisation of acute stroke, coronary and trauma care to two hospitals (both in Dublin South City) but limited differentiation and integration between both. • Multiple out of hours GP co-operatives. |
Dublin Midlands (Dublin South, Longford, Westmeath, Laois, Offaly, Kildare) | Population: 761,324 Area (km2): 8442 | • Centralisation of acute stroke (Kildare, Westmeath, and Dublin South) coronary care (Dublin South) and trauma (Offaly and Dublin South) at several hospitals, supported by ambulance bypass protocols. • Limited integration of clinical governance. • Several out of hours GP co-operatives operating. |
South East (Carlow, Kilkenny, Wexford, Waterford and Tipperary South) | Population: 497,305 Area (km2): 9451 | • Designated hub for major trauma, and acute coronary care (Waterford – PCI centre supported out of hours by Cork) with ambulance bypass protocols. • Acute stroke care available at all 4 hospitals. • Informal clinical network with shared regional rota for emergency medicine consultants. • Single GP out of hours co-operative. |
South (Cork and Kerry) | Population: 663,176 Area (km2): 12,161 | • Region-specific reconfiguration plan largely implemented, beginning 2012–2013. • Two emergency departments reconfigured to local injury units, with another closing. • Acute stroke, coronary and major trauma care provided at hub CUH [Cork] with support of ambulance protocols and outlying centres (Kerry can thrombolyse and deal with most trauma and myocardial infarctions (MIs), Bantry [Cork] does thrombolysis). • Region-wide clinical governance structures established. • Single GP out of hours co-operative. |
Mid-West (Limerick, Clare and Tipperary North) | Population: 378,210 Area (km2): 8252 | • Region-specific reconfiguration plan largely implemented, 2009–2013. • All emergency care centralised to one hospital (Limerick), former emergency departments reconfigured to local injury units. • Ambulance bypass protocols and region-wide clinical directorates established. • Single GP out of hours co-operative. |
West (Galway, Roscommon, Mayo, Leitrim, Sligo, Donegal) | Population: 702,966 Area (km2): 22,649 | • Reconfiguration of one emergency department to a local injury unit in 2011. • Single hub for acute coronary (Galway is the PCI centre but Sligo and Roscommon have a mobile cath. Lab 1 day a week) and major trauma care with support services provided at other centres (Mayo, Donegal and Sligo take most trauma cases). • Acute stroke care available at all centres, excluding Roscommon. • Clinical directorates established across the region. • Several out of hours GP co-operatives. |
a Source: Central Statistics Office [13]
Data sources
| Service | Details of data collected |
|---|---|
| Pre-hospital Expenditure | |
| General Practice: Activity, Funding and Staffing | • Claims through the Primary Care Reimbursement Service (PCRS) categorised as ‘Emergency’ and ‘Out of Hours’ were taken to represent urgent and emergency cases [ • GP and practice nursing workforce figures were reported in a recent study [ • Data on workforce employed by GP co-operatives were gathered through surveys sent to the General Manager of each practice (response rate = 90%). • Additional data on healthcare service utilisation taken from the Quarterly National Household Survey [ |
| Ambulance Services: Activity, Funding and Staffing | • Data on ambulance staffing was provided by the National Ambulance Service [ |
| In-Hospital Expenditure | |
| Public ED and LIU: Activity, Funding and Staffing | • Public ED and LIU expenditure data were provided by the Health Service Executive’s (HSE) Healthcare Pricing Office (HPO). • Overall Hospital expenditure data were extracted from the HSE Management Data report [ • Surveys designed to collect additional data on ED and LIU consultant, non-consultant hospital doctor and nursing staffing levels were posted to all hospitals (Response rate = 33%). Secondary sources were used to supplement the survey data [ • Presentations at each public ED and LIU were extracted from the HSE Data Management report [ |
| Private ED and LIU: Activity, Funding and Staffing | • Data on consultant staffing and activity in private EDs were estimated by the HSE, based on contractual agreements with consultants around the split between public and private work. • Data on the number of presentations at private LIUs were used to estimate resources used in private clinics [ |
| County of Residence: Utilisation | • The patient’s county of residence in relation to each ED and LIU presentation was extracted from the Hospital In-Patient Enquiry Scheme, held by the HPO. |
| Population Estimates | |
| County and Regional | • All population data were taken from the 2011 Census [ |
Spending per capita on Urgent and Emergency Care by county and region, Euro 2014
| Region/County | GPs | Ambulance | Public EDs and LIUs | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North East | ||||
| Cavan | 1.94 | 39.97 | 123.89 | 165.80 |
| Louth | 7.35 | 47.96 | 152.37 | 207.68 |
| Meath | 16.85 | 17.99 | 33.32 | 68.16 |
| Monaghan | 1.95 | 55.27 | 13.37 | 70.59 |
| Dublin North East | ||||
| Dublin | 13.26 | 22.45 | 109.93 | 145.64 |
| Dublin South | ||||
| Dublin | 13.26 | 22.45 | 109.93 | 145.64 |
| Wicklow | 9.65 | 37.00 | 0.00 | 46.65 |
| Dublin Midlands | ||||
| Dublin | 13.26 | 22.45 | 109.93 | 145.64 |
| Kildare | 14.54 | 21.85 | 32.92 | 69.32 |
| Laois | 13.19 | 33.25 | 87.71 | 134.14 |
| Longford | 18.26 | 59.35 | 0.00 | 77.62 |
| Offaly | 13.19 | 61.75 | 100.30 | 175.24 |
| Westmeath | 18.27 | 55.96 | 65.15 | 139.38 |
| South East | ||||
| Carlow | 39.17 | 38.25 | 0.00 | 77.42 |
| Kilkenny | 39.17 | 29.19 | 52.65 | 121.01 |
| Tipperary | 13.53 | 59.05 | 60.83 | 133.93 |
| Waterford | 10.62 | 41.61 | 96.70 | 148.93 |
| Wexford | 12.08 | 32.59 | 55.05 | 99.71 |
| South | ||||
| Cork | 22.62 | 32.86 | 74.24 | 129.72 |
| Kerry | 26.82 | 58.66 | 55.32 | 140.80 |
| Mid-West | ||||
| Clare | 12.63 | 58.85 | 14.31 | 85.79 |
| Limerick | 21.19 | 26.14 | 100.83 | 148.16 |
| Tipperary | 13.53 | 59.05 | 60.83 | 133.93 |
| West | ||||
| Donegal | 14.31 | 54.94 | 52.87 | 122.11 |
| Galway | 14.29 | 36.91 | 90.24 | 141.43 |
| Leitrim | 10.10 | 64.82 | 0.00 | 74.93 |
| Mayo | 16.76 | 49.68 | 40.17 | 105.65 |
| Roscommon | 10.44 | 71.52 | 28.24 | 110.21 |
| Sligo | 10.10 | 25.34 | 129.52 | 164.97 |
| National Average |
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The county of Dublin spans three regions (Dublin North-East, Dublin South and Dublin Midlands), while Tipperary spans two regions (Mid-West and South-East). Consequently Dublin and Tipperary appear more than once in the table
Regional spending per capita in urgent and emergency care, 2014 Euro
| Pre-hospital Expenditure | Public ED and LIU Expenditure | Private ED and LIU Expenditure | Overall Expenditure | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dublin South | 46 | 79 | 14 | 139 |
| Dublin North East | 33 | 98 | 7 | 138 |
| South | 62 | 61 | 9 | 132 |
| West | 61 | 61 | 6 | 127 |
| North East | 45 | 79 | 0 | 124 |
| South East | 59 | 64 | 0 | 123 |
| Mid West | 60 | 60 | 0 | 120 |
| Dublin Midlands | 42 | 63 | 0 | 105 |
Pre-hospital expenditure includes spending on GP and practice nurse services (in and out of hours) and ambulance services
Fig. 2Hospital (ED and LIU) resources utilised by residents of each county (€ per capita 2014)