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. 1985 Jul;14(7):672-6.
doi: 10.1016/s0196-0644(85)80886-6.

Inappropriate emergency department visits

Inappropriate emergency department visits

D P Buesching et al. Ann Emerg Med. 1985 Jul.

Abstract

Guidelines adopted in 1982 by the American College of Emergency Physicians were used to determine appropriate and inappropriate emergency department (ED) utilization patterns at three community hospitals during a two-week period in August 1983. In all, 3,130 visits were examined. There was an overall inappropriate visit rate of 10.8%, although considerable variation was observed among the three hospitals. Subgroups with the highest inappropriate visit rates included the following: 1) persons with Medicaid as the primary payment source (17.3%); 2) children aged 5 years or younger (15.2%); 3) those unable to identify a personal physician (14.1%); 4) unemployed persons (13.1%); 5) patients making visits during regular office hours (12.6%); and 6) those failing to attempt to contact their personal physicians (12.4%). These variations in inappropriate usage were all statistically significant at the P less than .05 level or better. Inability to identify a personal physician emerged as the most pervasive influence on inappropriate ED visit rates (P less than .001).

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