OBJECTIVES: (i) To ascertain what proportion of patients attending the general medical outpatient service at Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital (RXH) could safely be managed at peripheral primary care facilities; and (ii) to measure the effect of the introduction of free health care for children under 6 years of age on requirements for levels of care ranging from home to super-specialist referral centres. DESIGN: Prospective survey of patients attending on a stratified, randomised sample of 7 days in March 1994 (N = 1 962) and again in November 1994 (N = 1 404)-before and after the introduction on 6 June 1994 of free care for children under 6 years of age. SETTING: The general outpatient department of an academic/referral children's hospital. PATIENT SELECTION: All patients attending the outpatient department on the study days (7h00 to 6h59 the following day), excluding those who were referred, returning for follow-up, attending a specialist clinic or attending the surgical outpatient department. QUESTIONNAIRE: The questionnaire completed by medical officers recorded the following: patient's name, folder number, date and time of arrival, whether referred, clinic, treating doctor, disposal, diagnoses, home suburb and the level of care required: (i) home: (ii) clinic without a doctor; (iii) clinic with a doctor; (iv) hospital with non-specialists; (v) hospital with general paediatricians; or (vi) super-specialist hospital. MAIN RESULTS: In March 1994 the percentages of unreferred patients requiring the 6 levels of care defined for the study were 0.3, 25, 62, 8, 3 and 1, respectively. In November 1994 the percentages were 4, 41, 43, 8, 4 and 1. The graph of the number of patients seen at the outpatient department each month shows a large month-to-month variation but the trend is clearly towards an increase. CONCLUSIONS: The general medical outpatient department at RXH provides care to a large number of children, 48% of whom are unreferred. Of the unreferred patients 95% could be treated (more appropriately for the health services and more conveniently for their families) at a local primary health care facility. The situation has been aggravated by the introduction of free care for children under 6 years of age, who constitute 83% of the unreferred workload.
OBJECTIVES: (i) To ascertain what proportion of patients attending the general medical outpatient service at Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital (RXH) could safely be managed at peripheral primary care facilities; and (ii) to measure the effect of the introduction of free health care for children under 6 years of age on requirements for levels of care ranging from home to super-specialist referral centres. DESIGN: Prospective survey of patients attending on a stratified, randomised sample of 7 days in March 1994 (N = 1 962) and again in November 1994 (N = 1 404)-before and after the introduction on 6 June 1994 of free care for children under 6 years of age. SETTING: The general outpatient department of an academic/referral children's hospital. PATIENT SELECTION: All patients attending the outpatient department on the study days (7h00 to 6h59 the following day), excluding those who were referred, returning for follow-up, attending a specialist clinic or attending the surgical outpatient department. QUESTIONNAIRE: The questionnaire completed by medical officers recorded the following: patient's name, folder number, date and time of arrival, whether referred, clinic, treating doctor, disposal, diagnoses, home suburb and the level of care required: (i) home: (ii) clinic without a doctor; (iii) clinic with a doctor; (iv) hospital with non-specialists; (v) hospital with general paediatricians; or (vi) super-specialist hospital. MAIN RESULTS: In March 1994 the percentages of unreferred patients requiring the 6 levels of care defined for the study were 0.3, 25, 62, 8, 3 and 1, respectively. In November 1994 the percentages were 4, 41, 43, 8, 4 and 1. The graph of the number of patients seen at the outpatient department each month shows a large month-to-month variation but the trend is clearly towards an increase. CONCLUSIONS: The general medical outpatient department at RXH provides care to a large number of children, 48% of whom are unreferred. Of the unreferred patients 95% could be treated (more appropriately for the health services and more conveniently for their families) at a local primary health care facility. The situation has been aggravated by the introduction of free care for children under 6 years of age, who constitute 83% of the unreferred workload.
Authors: Paul Bossyns; Ranaou Abache; Mahaman S Abdoulaye; Hamidou Miyé; Anne-Marie Depoorter; Wim Van Lerberghe Journal: BMC Health Serv Res Date: 2006-04-12 Impact factor: 2.655