University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania;
Children's Community Pediatrics, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and.
Pediatrics. 2019 Dec;144(6). doi: 10.1542/peds.2019-0545. Epub 2019 Nov 8.
Incomplete subspecialty referrals, whether unscheduled or unattended, represent unmet patient needs and an opportunity to improve patient safety and experiences. Our objectives were to describe the rates of appointment scheduling and visit attendance after pediatric subspecialty referral and to examine patient and systems factors associated with scheduled referrals and attended appointments.
We conducted a retrospective review of referrals within a network of 52 primary and urgent care sites from November 2016 to October 2017. We included referrals for children ≤17 years old referred to medical or surgical subspecialists. We examined patient and health systems factors associated with (1) appointment scheduling and (2) visit attendance.
Of 20 466 referrals, 13 261 (65%) resulted in an appointment scheduled within 90 days and 10 514 (51%) resulted in a visit attended within 90 days. In adjusted analyses, referral to surgical subspecialists was associated with an increased likelihood of appointment scheduling but a decreased likelihood of visit attendance. Compared with appointments scheduled within 7 days, appointments with intervals from referral to scheduled appointment exceeding 7 days were associated with decreasing likelihood of visit attendance (adjusted odds ratio 8-14 days 0.48; 95% confidence interval 0.37-0.61). Patient factors associated with decreased likelihood of both appointment scheduling and visit attendance included African American race, public insurance, and lower zip code median income.
Patient and system factors were associated with variation in appointment scheduling and visit attendance. Decreased interval to appointment was significantly associated with visit attendance. These factors represent targets for interventions to improve referral completion.
未预约或未就诊的不完全专科转诊,代表着未满足的患者需求,也是提高患者安全和体验的机会。我们的目的是描述儿科专科转诊后的预约安排和就诊出席率,并研究与预约转诊和就诊出席相关的患者和系统因素。
我们对 2016 年 11 月至 2017 年 10 月期间,一个由 52 个初级和紧急护理站点组成的网络中的转诊情况进行了回顾性研究。我们纳入了转诊至内科或外科专科医生的≤17 岁儿童。我们研究了与(1)预约安排和(2)就诊出席相关的患者和医疗系统因素。
在 20466 次转诊中,13261 次(65%)在 90 天内安排了预约,10514 次(51%)在 90 天内就诊。在调整分析中,转诊至外科专科医生与预约安排的可能性增加相关,但与就诊出席的可能性降低相关。与 7 天内安排的预约相比,转诊至预约之间的间隔超过 7 天的预约与就诊出席的可能性降低相关(调整后的优势比 8-14 天为 0.48;95%置信区间为 0.37-0.61)。与预约安排和就诊出席的可能性降低相关的患者因素包括非裔美国人种族、公共保险和较低的邮政编码中位数收入。
患者和系统因素与预约安排和就诊出席的变化相关。预约间隔时间的缩短与就诊出席显著相关。这些因素代表了改善转诊完成率的干预目标。