An intervention connecting low-acuity emergency department patients with primary care: effect on future primary care linkage
- PMID: 23261312
- DOI: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2012.10.021
An intervention connecting low-acuity emergency department patients with primary care: effect on future primary care linkage
Abstract
Study objective: Our objective is to determine whether a point-of-care intervention that navigates willing, low-acuity patients from the emergency department (ED) to a Primary Care Clinic will increase future primary care follow-up.
Methods: We conducted a quasi-experimental trial at an urban safety net hospital. Adults presenting to the ED for select low-acuity problems were eligible. Patients were excluded if arriving by emergency medical services, if febrile, or if the triage nurse believed they required ED care. We enrolled 965 patients. Navigators escorted a subset of willing participants to the Primary Care Clinic (in the same hospital complex), where they were assigned a personal physician, were given an overview of clinic services, and received same-day clinic care. The primary outcome was Primary Care Clinic follow-up within 1 year of the index ED visit among patients having no previous primary care provider.
Results: In the bivariate intention-to-treat analysis, 50.3% of intervention group patients versus 36.9% of control group patients with no previous primary care provider had at least 1 Primary Care Clinic follow-up visit in the year after the intervention. In the multivariable analysis, the absolute difference in having at least 1 Primary Care Clinic follow-up for the intervention group compared with the control group was 9.3% (95% confidence interval 2.2% to 16.3%). There was no significant difference in the number of future ED visits.
Conclusion: A point-of-care intervention offering low-acuity ED patients the opportunity to alternatively be treated at the hospital's Primary Care Clinic resulted in increased future primary care follow-up compared with standard ED referral practices.
Copyright © 2012. Published by Mosby, Inc.
Comment in
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Continuing care for patients choosing the emergency department as a site for primary care: feasibility, benefits, and EMTALA considerations.Ann Emerg Med. 2013 Mar;61(3):322-3. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2013.01.003. Ann Emerg Med. 2013. PMID: 23433018 No abstract available.
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Annals of Emergency Medicine Journal Club. Continuing care for patients choosing the emergency department as a site for primary care: feasibility, benefits, and EMTALA considerations: answers to the March 2013 Journal Club Questions.Ann Emerg Med. 2013 Aug;62(2):187-93. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2013.04.005. Ann Emerg Med. 2013. PMID: 23870738 No abstract available.
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