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Acute Care Pathways for Patients Calling the Out-of-hours Services

Overview
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Health Services
Date 2020 Feb 29
PMID 32106846
Citations 4
Authors
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Abstract

Background: In Western countries, patients with acute illness or injury out-of-hours (OOH) can call either emergency medical services (EMS) for emergencies or primary care services (OOH-PC) in less urgent situations. Callers initially choose which service to contact; whether this choice reflect the intended differences in urgency and severity is unknown. Hospital diagnoses and admission rates following an OOH service contact could elucidate this. We aimed to investigate and compare the prevalence of patient contacts, subsequent hospital contacts, and the age-related pattern of hospital diagnoses following an out-of-hours contact to EMS or OOH-PC services in Denmark.

Methods: Population-based observational cohort study including patients from two Danish regions with contact to EMS or OOH-PC in 2016. Hospital contacts were defined as short (< 24 h) or admissions (≥24 h) on the date of OOH service contact. Both regions have EMS, whereas the North Denmark Region has a general practitioner cooperative (GPC) as OOH-PC service and the Capital Region of Copenhagen the Medical Helpline 1813 (MH-1813), together representing all Danish OOH service types. Calling an OOH service is mandatory prior to a hospital contact outside office hours.

Results: OOH-PC handled 91% (1,107,297) of all contacts (1,219,963). Subsequent hospital contacts were most frequent for EMS contacts (46-54%) followed by MH-1813 (41%) and GPC contacts (9%). EMS had more admissions (52-56%) than OOH-PC. For both EMS and OOH-PC, short hospital contacts often concerned injuries (32-63%) and non-specific diagnoses (20-45%). The proportion of circulatory disease was almost twice as large following EMS (13-17%) compared to OOH-PC (7-9%) in admitted patients, whereas respiratory diseases (11-14%), injuries (15-22%) and non-specific symptoms (22-29%) were more equally distributed. Generally, admitted patients were older.

Conclusions: EMS contacts were fewer, but with a higher percentage of hospital contacts, admissions and prevalence of circulatory diseases compared to OOH-PC, perhaps indicating that patients more often contact EMS in case of severe disease. However, hospital diagnoses only elucidate severity of diseases to some extent, and other measures of severity could be considered in future studies. Moreover, the socio-demographic pattern of patients calling OOH needs exploration as this may play an important role in choice of entrance.

Citing Articles

Emergency Call versus General Practitioner Requested Ambulances - Patient Mortality, Disease Severity and Pattern.

Sovso M, Haurum R, Ebbesen T, Rasmussen A, Ward L, Mogensen M Clin Epidemiol. 2024; 16:513-523.

PMID: 39101155 PMC: 11297546. DOI: 10.2147/CLEP.S469430.


Acute patients discharged without an established diagnosis: risk of mortality and readmission of nonspecific diagnoses compared to disease-specific diagnoses.

Gregersen R, Villumsen M, Mottlau K, Maule C, Nygaard H, Rasmussen J Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med. 2024; 32(1):32.

PMID: 38641643 PMC: 11027222. DOI: 10.1186/s13049-024-01191-4.


Reasons for acute referrals to hospital from general practitioners and out-of-hours doctors in Norway: a registry-based observational study.

Blinkenberg J, Hetlevik O, Sandvik H, Baste V, Hunskaar S BMC Health Serv Res. 2022; 22(1):78.

PMID: 35033069 PMC: 8761320. DOI: 10.1186/s12913-021-07444-7.


Associations between degree-of-worry, self-rated health and acute hospitalisation after contacting a medical helpline: a Danish prospective cohort study.

Jensen A, Kristiansen M, Tolstrup J, Gamst-Jensen H BMJ Open. 2021; 11(5):e042287.

PMID: 34045212 PMC: 8162089. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-042287.

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