Effect of hospital interventions to improve patient flow on emergency department clinical quality indicators
Autor: | Simon Sethi, Stevan R. Bruijns, Caroline Boulind, Julie Reeve, Amanda Carney |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Quality management Psychological intervention Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine Workflow 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Patient experience medicine Humans 030212 general & internal medicine Quality Indicators Health Care Retrospective Studies business.industry Attendance 030208 emergency & critical care medicine General Medicine Emergency department Quality Improvement Test (assessment) England Emergency medicine Ambulatory Emergency Medicine Emergency Service Hospital business Qualitative research |
Zdroj: | Emergency Medicine Journal. :emermed-2019 |
ISSN: | 1472-0213 1472-0205 |
DOI: | 10.1136/emermed-2019-208579 |
Popis: | IntroductionThe Royal College of Emergency Medicine highlights poor flow through hospitals as a major challenge to improving emergency department flow. We describe the effect of several hospital-wide flow interventions on Yeovil District Hospital’s emergency department flow.MethodsDuring 2016, a design science research study addressed several areas disproportionally contributing to exit block within Yeovil District Hospital. In this follow-up study, we used a retrospective, before/after design, to describe the effect of these interventions on the ED. We used the Royal College of Emergency Medicine’s clinical quality indicators (4-hour standard, time to decision-maker, 7-day unplanned reattendance, left without being seen, ambulatory patient care and patient experience). Pearson correlation coefficient (r) was used to compare variables. Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to compare performance before and after the intervention.ResultsYeovil District Hospital emergency department was attended by 160 373 patients between August 2015 and October 2018. Mean monthly attendance was 4112 (±342) patients, mean age was 43 (±28) years with equal male/female split (49/51%). The 4-hour standard made a recovery from 92% to 97% (p=0.01) that did not correlate with a recovery in national data (r=0.09); this despite rising attendances both at Yeovil and nationally (r=0.75). All clinical quality indicators improved significantly (except unplanned reattendance and patient feedback which improved but not significantly).DiscussionThe positive effect on emergency department clinical quality indicators reveals the beneficial impact of improving in-patient flow. Qualitative research is needed to better understand facilitators and barriers to flow improvement work. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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