University of California, San Francisco, Department of Emergency Medicine, San Francisco, California.
Vituity Healthcare, Emeryville, California.
West J Emerg Med. 2019 Oct 16;20(6):865-874. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2019.8.43221.
The short-term return visit rate among patients discharged from emergency departments (ED) is a quality metric and target for interventions. The ability to accurately identify which patients are more likely to revisit the ED could allow EDs and health systems to develop more focused interventions, but efforts to reduce revisits have not yet found success. Whether patients with a high number of ED visits are at increased risk of a return visit remains underexplored.
This was a population-based, retrospective, cohort study using administrative data from a large physician partnership. We included patients discharged from EDs from 80 hospitals in seven states from July 2014 - June 2016. We performed multivariable logistic regression of short-term return visits on patient, visit, hospital, and community characteristics. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients who had a return visit within 14 days of an index ED visit.
Among 6,699,717 index visits, the overall risk of 14-day revisit was 12.6%. Frequent visitors accounted for 18.7% of all visits and 40.2% of all 14-day revisits. Frequent visitor status was associated with the highest odds of a revisit (odds ratio [OR] 3.06; 95% confidence interval [CI], 3.041 - 3.073). Other predictors of revisits were cellulitis (OR 2.131; 95% CI, 2.106 - 2.156), alcohol-related disorders (OR 1.579; 95%CI, 1.548 - 1.610), congestive heart failure (OR 1.175; 95% CI, 1.126 - 1.226), and public insurance (Medicaid OR 1.514; 95% CI, 1.501 - 1.528; Medicare OR 1.601; 95% CI, 1.583 - 1.620).
Previous ED use - even a single previous visit - was a stronger predictor of a return visit than any other patient, hospital, or community characteristic. Clinicians should consider previous ED use when considering treatment decisions and risk of return visit, as should stakeholders targeting patients at risk of a return visit.
急诊科(ED)出院患者的短期复诊率是一个质量指标和干预目标。准确识别哪些患者更有可能再次就诊 ED 可以使 ED 和医疗系统能够制定更有针对性的干预措施,但减少复诊的努力尚未取得成功。患有大量 ED 就诊的患者是否有更高的复诊风险仍未得到充分探索。
这是一项基于人群的回顾性队列研究,使用来自大型医师合作组织的行政数据。我们纳入了 2014 年 7 月至 2016 年 6 月期间从 7 个州的 80 家医院出院的 ED 患者。我们对患者、就诊、医院和社区特征与短期复诊之间的关系进行了多变量逻辑回归分析。主要结局是在指数 ED 就诊后 14 天内再次就诊的患者比例。
在 6,699,717 次就诊中,14 天内复诊的总体风险为 12.6%。频繁就诊者占所有就诊的 18.7%,占所有 14 天内复诊的 40.2%。频繁就诊者的复诊可能性最高(优势比 [OR] 3.06;95%置信区间 [CI] 3.041 - 3.073)。其他复诊预测因素包括蜂窝织炎(OR 2.131;95%CI,2.106 - 2.156)、酒精相关障碍(OR 1.579;95%CI,1.548 - 1.610)、充血性心力衰竭(OR 1.175;95%CI,1.126 - 1.226)和公共保险(Medicaid OR 1.514;95%CI,1.501 - 1.528;Medicare OR 1.601;95%CI,1.583 - 1.620)。
之前的 ED 使用——即使是单次就诊——也是再次就诊的更强预测因素,比其他任何患者、医院或社区特征都更具预测性。临床医生在考虑治疗决策和复诊风险时应考虑之前的 ED 使用情况,而利益相关者在针对有复诊风险的患者时也应如此。