Service evaluation of 'GP at Door' of accident and emergency services in Eastern England.

Julii Brainard, Aiden Rice, Gareth Hughes, Paul Everden
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Abstract

Aim: We describe activity, outcomes, and benefits after streaming low urgency attenders to General practice services at Door of Accident and Emergency departments (GDAE).

Background: Many attendances to A&Es are for non-urgent health problems that could be better met by primary care rather than urgent care clinicians. It is valuable to monitor service activity, outcomes, service user demographics, and potential benefits when primary care is co-located with A&E departments.

Methods: As a service evaluation, we describe and analyse GDAE users, reasons for presentation, wait times, outcomes, and co-located A&E wait times at two hospitals in eastern England. Distributions of outcomes, wait times, reasons for attendance, deprivation, and age groups were compared for GDAE and usual A&E attenders at each site using Pearson chi-square tests and accelerated time failure modelling. Performance in a four-hour key performance indicator was descriptively compared for co-located and similar emergency departments.

Findings: Each GDAE saw about 1025 patients per month. Wait times for usual accident and emergency (A&E) care are relatively short at only one site. Reattendances were common (about 11% of unique patients), 75% of GDAE attenders were seen within 1 hour of arrival, 7% of patients initially allocated to GDAE were referred back to A&E for further investigations, and 59% of GDAE patients were treated and discharged with no further treatment or referral required. Pain, injury, infection, or feeling generally unwell each comprised > 10% of primary reasons for attendance. At James Paget University Hospital, 4.3%, and at Queen Elizabeth Hospital, 16.1% of GDAE attendances led to referral to specialist health services. GDAE attenders were younger and more socially deprived than attenders to co-located A&Es. Patients were seen quickly at both GDAE sites, but there were differences in counts of specialist referrals and wait times. Process evaluation could illuminate reasons for differences between study sites.

英格兰东部事故和紧急服务“上门GP”服务评价。
目的:我们描述活动,结果和效益后,流低紧急护理人员的一般做法服务在事故和急诊科(GDAE)的门。背景:许多到急诊科就诊的是非紧急健康问题,这些问题可以由初级保健医生而不是紧急护理医生更好地解决。当初级保健与急诊科设在同一地点时,监测服务活动、结果、服务用户人口统计和潜在利益是有价值的。方法:作为一项服务评估,我们描述和分析了GDAE的用户、呈现原因、等待时间、结果和英格兰东部两家医院的急诊等待时间。使用Pearson卡方检验和加速时间失效模型,比较每个站点GDAE和普通A&E参与者的结果分布、等待时间、出席原因、剥夺和年龄组。在四小时关键绩效指标的表现描述性地比较了同址和类似的急诊科。结果:每次GDAE每月约有1025例患者。通常的事故和紧急(A&E)护理的等待时间相对较短,只有一个站点。再次就诊很常见(约占独特患者的11%),75%的GDAE患者在到达后1小时内就诊,7%的最初分配到GDAE的患者被转回急诊室进行进一步调查,59%的GDAE患者接受治疗并出院,无需进一步治疗或转诊。疼痛、受伤、感染或感觉一般不适各占就诊的主要原因的10%。在詹姆斯·佩吉特大学医院,这一比例为4.3%,在伊丽莎白女王医院,16.1%的GDAE患者转诊到专科保健服务机构。GDAE的参与者比同址急诊室的参与者更年轻,更缺乏社会交往。患者在两个GDAE站点都能快速就诊,但在专家转诊次数和等待时间上存在差异。过程评价可以阐明研究地点之间差异的原因。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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