학술논문

A dedicated neurologist at the emergency department during out-of-office hours decreases patients’ length of stay and admission percentages.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Neurology. Mar2018, Vol. 265 Issue 3, p535-541. 7p. 1 Diagram, 2 Charts, 3 Graphs.
Subject
*HOSPITAL emergency services
*LENGTH of stay in hospitals
*NEUROLOGICAL disorders
*NEUROLOGISTS
*MEDICAL quality control
Language
ISSN
0340-5354
Abstract
Background: Emergency departments (EDs) worldwide face crowding, which hampers patient flow. In this study, the impact of a dedicated neurologist present at the ED on patient flow during out-of-office hours was assessed.Methods: A cross-sectional, mixed methods study was undertaken at a Dutch ED, including a pre-post analysis of data of patients who had a primary neurological disease (n = 458) and staff surveys (n = 152). Descriptive statistics and content analysis were used for analyses.Results: Despite a 36% increase in the number of neurological patients (control period: n = 194, intervention period n = 264), a 30 min per patient decrease in ED median length of stay (LOS) was reached during the intervention period. Furthermore, the admission percentage decreased significantly (57.7% in the control period vs. 47.7% in the intervention period, p = 0.03). During half of the shifts neurologists stated that their presence had been valuable. Perceived reasons for this added value mentioned were improved quality of care, enhanced throughput of patients, and quicker consultations with other medical specialists.Conclusions: In our hypothesis-generating study, a dedicated neurologist present at the ED during out-of-office hours was associated with decreased patients’ LOS and a decreased admission percentage, indicating increased decisiveness when the neurologist is present at the ED. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]