Department of Emergency Medicine, Brown University, 55 Claverick Street, Providence, RI 02903, United States of America.
Department of Emergency Medicine, George Washington University, Washington, DC, United States of America.
Am J Emerg Med. 2020 Jun;38(6):1115-1122. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2019.158384. Epub 2019 Aug 2.
Primary care (PC) follow-up for discharged emergency department (ED) patients provides patients with further medical attention. We conducted a pilot randomized controlled trial to determine whether using a freely-available physician appointment-booking website results in higher self-reported PC follow-up.
We randomized discharged patients whom treating physicians determined PC follow-up was important and who possessed health insurance but had no PC provider to one of three groups: (1) a PC appointment booked through the booking website prior to ED discharge; (2) written information on how to use the booking website; or (3) usual care (i.e. standard follow-up instructions). We phoned subjects two weeks after the ED visit to determine whether they had completed a PC follow-up visit. We also asked subjects about their satisfaction with obtaining a PC appointment, satisfaction with the ED visit, symptom resolution and subsequent ED visits. The self-reported PCP follow-up rate was compared among the study groups by estimating the risk difference (RD) and 95% CI between usual care and each intervention group.
272 subjects were enrolled and randomized and 68% completed the two-week telephone follow-up interview. The self-reported PCP follow-up rate was higher (52%) among subjects whose appointment was booked on the website before ED discharge (RD = 16%; 95% CI -1%, 34%) and lower (25%) for subjects who received booking website information (RD = 13%; 95% CI -32%, 7%) compared to subjects (36%) in the usual care group. A higher percentage of subjects in the booking group were more likely to report being extremely or very satisfied with obtaining a PC appointment (78%) compared to those who received booking website information (54%) or usual care (40%).
Among ED patients that providers judged PC follow-up is important, using a booking website to schedule an appointment before ED discharge resulted in a higher but not statistically significant self-reported PC follow-up rate. This intervention warrants further investigation in a study with a larger sample size and objective follow-up visit data.
为出院的急诊患者提供初级保健(PC)随访,为患者提供进一步的医疗服务。我们进行了一项试点随机对照试验,以确定使用免费的医生预约网站是否会增加自我报告的 PC 随访率。
我们将接受治疗的医生认为 PC 随访很重要且拥有医疗保险但没有 PC 提供者的出院患者随机分为三组:(1)在 ED 出院前通过预约网站预约 PC 随访;(2)有关如何使用预约网站的书面信息;或(3)常规护理(即标准随访说明)。我们在 ED 就诊后两周给患者打电话,以确定他们是否完成了 PC 随访。我们还询问了患者对获得 PC 预约的满意度、对 ED 就诊的满意度、症状缓解情况以及随后的 ED 就诊情况。通过估计常规护理与每个干预组之间的风险差异(RD)和 95%置信区间(CI),比较研究组之间的自我报告的 PCP 随访率。
共有 272 名患者入组并随机分组,其中 68%完成了两周的电话随访。在 ED 出院前通过预约网站预约的患者(RD=16%;95%CI -1%,34%)自我报告的 PCP 随访率较高(52%),而接受预约网站信息的患者(RD=13%;95%CI -32%,7%)则较低,与常规护理组(36%)相比。预约组中更有可能报告对获得 PC 预约非常满意或满意的患者比例较高(78%),而接受预约网站信息或常规护理的患者比例分别为 54%和 40%。
在提供者判断 PC 随访很重要的 ED 患者中,在 ED 出院前使用预约网站预约可提高但不具有统计学意义的自我报告的 PC 随访率。这项干预措施需要在一项具有更大样本量和客观随访数据的研究中进一步研究。