AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated referral and triage pathways for pediatric patients with bowel dysfunction in an Australian hospital, focusing on new patient appointments from April to June 2014.
  • Out of 1485 new patients, 281 (18.9%) presented with bowel or bladder issues, with significant wait times for initial appointments ranging from 2.5 to 7.7 months based on the clinic type.
  • The findings suggest that many children face long delays for diagnosis and treatment, indicating a need for alternative care options like community-based primary care to enhance timely management.

Article Abstract

Aim: This study aimed to explore referral and triage pathways for paediatric patients referred to an Australian hospital with bowel dysfunction (isolated or mixed bowel and bladder).

Methods: We conducted a retrospective audit of patients who attended their first clinic appointment during April to June 2014. Patients were included if they: (i) were a new patient referred for symptoms of constipation, soiling, daytime urinary incontinence or enuresis; and (ii) attended the encopresis, general medicine, continence, gastroenterology, paediatric surgery, urology, renal or Child and Adolescent Mental Health clinic. Patients with an organic cause (e.g. Hirschsprung disease) for their dysfunction were excluded.

Results: Of 1485 new patients seen at our targeted clinics, 281 (18.9%) had symptoms of bowel and/or bladder dysfunction. After excluding patients aged younger than 3 years (n = 43) and those with isolated bladder dysfunction (n = 130), 56 were referred for isolated bowel dysfunction and 52 for mixed bowel and bladder dysfunction. The median wait time from referral to first appointment was 3.8 months. Median wait times varied across symptom groups (isolated bowel, 4.6 months; mixed 3.4 months) and clinics (encopresis, 7.7 months; general medicine, 2.5 months). Over a 12-month period, patients attended an average of 3.5 appointments (isolated bowel, mean 3 appointments; mixed, mean 4 appointments).

Conclusion: Paediatric patients with symptoms of bowel and bladder dysfunction wait several months to be seen in a public tertiary referral hospital. Alternative pathways for care, such as community-based primary care, need to be explored to improve timely management.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jpc.14601DOI Listing

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