Cargando…

Novel Discharge Center for Transition of Care in Vulnerable Emergency Department Treat and Release Patients

Introduction The majority of emergency department (ED) patients are discharged following evaluation and treatment. Most patients are recommended to follow up with a primary care provider (PCP) or specialist. However, there is considerable variation between providers and EDs in discharge process prac...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Iyeke, Lisa O, Razack, Bibi, Richman, Mark, Berman, Adam J, Davis, Frederick, Willis, Helena, Gizzi-Murphy, Marina, Guilherme, Stephen, Johnson, Sarah, Njoku, Chinna, Ramjattan, Genelle, Krol, Katarzyna, Kwon, Nancy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10017056/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36938288
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34937
_version_ 1784907496894234624
author Iyeke, Lisa O
Razack, Bibi
Richman, Mark
Berman, Adam J
Davis, Frederick
Willis, Helena
Gizzi-Murphy, Marina
Guilherme, Stephen
Johnson, Sarah
Njoku, Chinna
Ramjattan, Genelle
Krol, Katarzyna
Kwon, Nancy
author_facet Iyeke, Lisa O
Razack, Bibi
Richman, Mark
Berman, Adam J
Davis, Frederick
Willis, Helena
Gizzi-Murphy, Marina
Guilherme, Stephen
Johnson, Sarah
Njoku, Chinna
Ramjattan, Genelle
Krol, Katarzyna
Kwon, Nancy
author_sort Iyeke, Lisa O
collection PubMed
description Introduction The majority of emergency department (ED) patients are discharged following evaluation and treatment. Most patients are recommended to follow up with a primary care provider (PCP) or specialist. However, there is considerable variation between providers and EDs in discharge process practices that might facilitate such follow-up (e.g., simply discharging patients with follow-up physician names/contact information vs. making appointments for patients). Patients who do not follow up with their PCPs or specialists are more likely to be readmitted within 30 days than those who do. Furthermore, vulnerable patients have difficulty arranging transitional care appointments due to poor health literacy, inadequate insurance, appointment availability, and self-efficacy. Our innovative ED discharge process utilizes an Emergency Department Discharge Center (EDDC) staffed by ED Care Coordinators and assists patients with scheduling post-discharge appointments to improve rates of follow-up with outpatient providers. This study describes the structure and activities of the EDDC, characterizes the EDDC patient population, and demonstrates the volume and specialties of appointments scheduled by EDDC Care Coordinators. The impact of the EDDC on operational metrics (72-hour returns, 30-day admissions, and length-of-stay [LOS]) and the impact of the EDDC on patient satisfaction are evaluated. Methods The Long Island Jewish Medical Center (LIJMC) EDDC is an intervention developed in July 2020 within a 583-bed urban hospital serving a racially, ethnically, and socio-economically diverse population, with many patients having limited access to healthcare. Data from the Emergency Medicine Service Line (EMSL), an ED Care Coordinator database, and manual chart review were collected from July 2020 to July 2021 to examine the impact of the EDDC on 72-hour returns, 30-day admissions, and Press Ganey's® "likelihood to recommend ED" score (a widely used patient satisfaction survey question). The EDDC pilot cohort was compared to non-EDDC discharged patients during the same period. Results In unadjusted analysis, EDDC patients were moderately less likely to return to the ED within 72 hours (5.3% vs. 6.5%; p = 0.0044) or be admitted within 30 days (3.4% vs. 4.2%). The program was particularly beneficial for uninsured and elderly patients. For both EDDC and non-EDDC patients, most revisits and 30-day admissions were for the same chief complaint as the index visit. The length-of-stay increased by ~10 minutes with no impact on satisfaction with ED visits. Musculoskeletal conditions (~20%) and specialties (~15%) were the most commonly represented. Approximately 10% of referrals were to obtain a PCP. Nearly 90% were to new providers or specialties. Most scheduled appointments occurred within a week.  Conclusion This novel EDDC program, developed to facilitate outpatient follow-up for discharged ED patients, produced a modest but statistically significant difference in 72-hour returns and 30-day admissions for patients with EDDC-scheduled appointments vs. those referred to outpatient providers using the standard discharge process. ED LOS increased by ~10 minutes for EDDC vs. non-EDDC patients, with no difference in satisfaction. Future analyses will investigate impacts on 72-hour returns, 30-day admissions, LOS, and satisfaction after adjusting for characteristics such as age, insurance, having a PCP, and whether the scheduled appointment was attended.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10017056
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Cureus
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-100170562023-03-16 Novel Discharge Center for Transition of Care in Vulnerable Emergency Department Treat and Release Patients Iyeke, Lisa O Razack, Bibi Richman, Mark Berman, Adam J Davis, Frederick Willis, Helena Gizzi-Murphy, Marina Guilherme, Stephen Johnson, Sarah Njoku, Chinna Ramjattan, Genelle Krol, Katarzyna Kwon, Nancy Cureus Emergency Medicine Introduction The majority of emergency department (ED) patients are discharged following evaluation and treatment. Most patients are recommended to follow up with a primary care provider (PCP) or specialist. However, there is considerable variation between providers and EDs in discharge process practices that might facilitate such follow-up (e.g., simply discharging patients with follow-up physician names/contact information vs. making appointments for patients). Patients who do not follow up with their PCPs or specialists are more likely to be readmitted within 30 days than those who do. Furthermore, vulnerable patients have difficulty arranging transitional care appointments due to poor health literacy, inadequate insurance, appointment availability, and self-efficacy. Our innovative ED discharge process utilizes an Emergency Department Discharge Center (EDDC) staffed by ED Care Coordinators and assists patients with scheduling post-discharge appointments to improve rates of follow-up with outpatient providers. This study describes the structure and activities of the EDDC, characterizes the EDDC patient population, and demonstrates the volume and specialties of appointments scheduled by EDDC Care Coordinators. The impact of the EDDC on operational metrics (72-hour returns, 30-day admissions, and length-of-stay [LOS]) and the impact of the EDDC on patient satisfaction are evaluated. Methods The Long Island Jewish Medical Center (LIJMC) EDDC is an intervention developed in July 2020 within a 583-bed urban hospital serving a racially, ethnically, and socio-economically diverse population, with many patients having limited access to healthcare. Data from the Emergency Medicine Service Line (EMSL), an ED Care Coordinator database, and manual chart review were collected from July 2020 to July 2021 to examine the impact of the EDDC on 72-hour returns, 30-day admissions, and Press Ganey's® "likelihood to recommend ED" score (a widely used patient satisfaction survey question). The EDDC pilot cohort was compared to non-EDDC discharged patients during the same period. Results In unadjusted analysis, EDDC patients were moderately less likely to return to the ED within 72 hours (5.3% vs. 6.5%; p = 0.0044) or be admitted within 30 days (3.4% vs. 4.2%). The program was particularly beneficial for uninsured and elderly patients. For both EDDC and non-EDDC patients, most revisits and 30-day admissions were for the same chief complaint as the index visit. The length-of-stay increased by ~10 minutes with no impact on satisfaction with ED visits. Musculoskeletal conditions (~20%) and specialties (~15%) were the most commonly represented. Approximately 10% of referrals were to obtain a PCP. Nearly 90% were to new providers or specialties. Most scheduled appointments occurred within a week.  Conclusion This novel EDDC program, developed to facilitate outpatient follow-up for discharged ED patients, produced a modest but statistically significant difference in 72-hour returns and 30-day admissions for patients with EDDC-scheduled appointments vs. those referred to outpatient providers using the standard discharge process. ED LOS increased by ~10 minutes for EDDC vs. non-EDDC patients, with no difference in satisfaction. Future analyses will investigate impacts on 72-hour returns, 30-day admissions, LOS, and satisfaction after adjusting for characteristics such as age, insurance, having a PCP, and whether the scheduled appointment was attended. Cureus 2023-02-13 /pmc/articles/PMC10017056/ /pubmed/36938288 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34937 Text en Copyright © 2023, Iyeke et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Emergency Medicine
Iyeke, Lisa O
Razack, Bibi
Richman, Mark
Berman, Adam J
Davis, Frederick
Willis, Helena
Gizzi-Murphy, Marina
Guilherme, Stephen
Johnson, Sarah
Njoku, Chinna
Ramjattan, Genelle
Krol, Katarzyna
Kwon, Nancy
Novel Discharge Center for Transition of Care in Vulnerable Emergency Department Treat and Release Patients
title Novel Discharge Center for Transition of Care in Vulnerable Emergency Department Treat and Release Patients
title_full Novel Discharge Center for Transition of Care in Vulnerable Emergency Department Treat and Release Patients
title_fullStr Novel Discharge Center for Transition of Care in Vulnerable Emergency Department Treat and Release Patients
title_full_unstemmed Novel Discharge Center for Transition of Care in Vulnerable Emergency Department Treat and Release Patients
title_short Novel Discharge Center for Transition of Care in Vulnerable Emergency Department Treat and Release Patients
title_sort novel discharge center for transition of care in vulnerable emergency department treat and release patients
topic Emergency Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10017056/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36938288
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34937
work_keys_str_mv AT iyekelisao noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT razackbibi noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT richmanmark noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT bermanadamj noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT davisfrederick noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT willishelena noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT gizzimurphymarina noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT guilhermestephen noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT johnsonsarah noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT njokuchinna noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT ramjattangenelle noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT krolkatarzyna noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients
AT kwonnancy noveldischargecenterfortransitionofcareinvulnerableemergencydepartmenttreatandreleasepatients