Outpatient clinic access for patients diagnosed with non-emergent ocular conditions has been shown to decrease patient load in the Emergency Department (ED)/Urgent Care and improve patient satisfaction with care. We sought to quantify referral completion rates and ED/Urgent Care visit durations at a pediatric tertiary care center and analyze how demographic factors may influence these quality indicators. We discuss an overarching strategy to improve access to subspecialty care through a same-day access program. We retrospectively reviewed ED/Urgent Care patient encounters from 2019 to 2024. Patients diagnosed with conjunctivitis, vision loss, corneal abrasion, or iritis referred for follow-up care were included in this report. Visit duration in the ED/Urgent Care, referral completion rates, and patient demographics were analyzed. Seven hundred six patient encounters met the initial inclusion criteria. The average visit duration in the ED/Urgent Care per month was 3.36 hours (median, 3.45; IQR, 2.84-3.81), the average proportion of incomplete referrals per month was 21.9% (median, 20%; IQR, 10.6%-30%), and average proportion of ED/Urgent Care visits over 4 hours per month was 33.1% (median, 33.3%; IQR, 21.3%-43.5%). Demographic subgroup analysis (n = 411) revealed a relationship between age, insurance status, zip code, and race with completed referral rates and visit duration in the ED/Urgent Care. Our results indicate long visit durations in the ED/Urgent Care and a large proportion of incomplete referrals for patients with non-emergent ocular issues. A same-day access program could streamline access to subspecialty care by moving patients directly to the ophthalmology department from the ED/Urgent Care.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00469580251326319 | DOI Listing |
Outpatient clinic access for patients diagnosed with non-emergent ocular conditions has been shown to decrease patient load in the Emergency Department (ED)/Urgent Care and improve patient satisfaction with care. We sought to quantify referral completion rates and ED/Urgent Care visit durations at a pediatric tertiary care center and analyze how demographic factors may influence these quality indicators. We discuss an overarching strategy to improve access to subspecialty care through a same-day access program.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUrology
March 2025
Department of Population Health Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC.
Objective: To develop and validate the first patient- and caregiver-reported measure of SB-specific "financial toxicity" (SBFT), i.e., the negative side effects of healthcare-related expenditures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Emerg Med
March 2025
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Atrium Health Musculoskeletal Institute, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Background: In response to the opioid epidemic, our multidisciplinary team designed and integrated an alert-based, clinical-decision support intervention which identifies patients at risk of opioid misuse based on five evidence-based risk factors (early refill of opioids/benzodiazepines; >2 ED/Urgent Care visits with onsite opioids; >3 prescriptions of opioids/benzodiazepines; prior overdose; and positive toxicology screen).
Objective: To evaluate the impact of the intervention on prescribing decisions for back pain by measuring the percent of opioid prescriptions modified in response to the alert.
Methods: A total of 93,192 adult patients presenting to the emergency department with complaints of back pain from 2017-2021 were included in this prospective, observational study.
J Cancer Surviv
November 2024
Department of Psychiatry, Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine, East Lansing, MI, USA.
Purpose: Three sequences of telephone symptom management interventions were tested on use of unscheduled health services among cancer survivors with depressive or anxiety symptoms during treatment (N = 334) and their informal caregivers (N = 333).
Methods: The three 12-week intervention sequences were as follows: (1) Symptom Management and Survivorship Handbook (SMSH), (2) a combined 8-week SMSH + Telephone Interpersonal Counseling (TIPC) followed by SMSH for 4 weeks, and (3) SMSH for 4 weeks followed by a combined SMSH + TIPC if no response to SMSH alone. Survivor-caregiver dyads were first randomized to SMSH or a combined SMSH + TIPC.
J Med Econ
November 2023
Evidence Synthesis, Modeling & Communication, Evidera Inc., Bethesda, MD, USA.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!