Saroff Don, Dell Rick, Brown E Richard
Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program, University of California, Los Angeles, USA.
Int J Qual Health Care. 2002 Apr;14(2):149-53. doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.intqhc.a002601.
Patient compliance with emergency department (ED)-generated referral is an important part of the delivery of quality health care. Although many studies from non-managed care health centers have reported on ED patient compliance, no studies have reported on this in a managed care setting. The objective of this study is to examine patient compliance with ED-generated referral and to produce a benchmark of follow-up rates possible in a capitated managed care system. That is to say, in a health care system whose members pay a uniform per capita payment or fee, one that has salaried physicians, owns its own hospitals, and has a mechanism of transition from ED to outpatient clinic that ensures referral accessibility.
Retrospective review of consecutive ED patient compliance with ED-generated referral.
PATIENTS/METHODS: All consecutive patients who presented to a managed care hospital's ED with an acute fracture and who were given an outpatient referral during the period from 23rd December 1998 to 23rd January, 1999. Of 8000 consecutive ED patients, 234 were included in the study. Compliance with ED-generated referral was determined from outpatient clinic records.
Of the 234 patients treated in the ED and referred, 222 (94.9%) complied with follow-up appointments.
We have demonstrated that an ED patient follow-up compliance rate of 94.9% can be obtained. It is probable that the high compliance rate is due to the features of the system studied. The high rate may also be related to the specific diagnosis studied, although previous literature reports poor ED patient compliance for the same diagnosis in a different ED setting. Additional research is needed to determine whether the high compliance rate reported in this study can be obtained in ED settings that are not part of a similar managed care system and to determine the role of referral accessibility (or inaccessibility) in current ED settings.
患者对急诊科发出的转诊的依从性是优质医疗服务提供的重要组成部分。尽管许多来自非管理式医疗健康中心的研究报告了急诊科患者的依从性,但尚无研究报告在管理式医疗环境中的情况。本研究的目的是检查患者对急诊科发出的转诊的依从性,并得出在按人头付费的管理式医疗系统中可能达到的随访率基准。也就是说,在一个医疗系统中,其成员支付统一的人均费用,有受薪医生,拥有自己的医院,并且有从急诊科到门诊诊所的转诊机制以确保转诊的可及性。
对连续的急诊科患者对急诊科发出的转诊的依从性进行回顾性审查。
患者/方法:1998年12月23日至1999年1月23日期间,所有因急性骨折到管理式医疗医院急诊科就诊并获得门诊转诊的连续患者。在8000名连续的急诊科患者中,234名被纳入研究。根据门诊记录确定对急诊科发出的转诊的依从性。
在急诊科接受治疗并被转诊的234名患者中,222名(94.9%)遵守了随访预约。
我们已经证明可以获得94.9%的急诊科患者随访依从率。高依从率可能归因于所研究系统的特点。高依从率也可能与所研究的特定诊断有关,尽管先前的文献报道在不同的急诊科环境中,相同诊断的急诊科患者依从性较差。需要进一步研究以确定在不属于类似管理式医疗系统的急诊科环境中是否能获得本研究报告的高依从率,并确定转诊可及性(或不可及性)在当前急诊科环境中的作用。