Identifying Care Gaps and Referral Patterns in Acute Dermatology at Urgent Care Centers

Author:

Rahman Syed Minhaj1,Bowden Acacia1,Green Clayton B.2,Pentland Alice P.2,Richardson Christopher T.2,DeBenedetto Anna2,Plovanich Molly3,Wolf Julie Ryan2

Affiliation:

1. University of Rochester

2. University of Rochester Medical Center

3. Dermatology and Skin Health

Abstract

Abstract

Limited urgent access to board-certified dermatologists drives patients to seek dermatologic care at urgent care centers (UCC). UCC are staffed by clinicians with comparatively limited dermatology training, often resulting in lower quality care for acute dermatology conditions. This study investigates health care referral outcomes of patients seeking dermatologic care at UCC, examine the appropriateness of UCC dermatologic care, and assess the feasibility of referral management by eConsult. We utilize a retrospective cohort of 807 patients and a provider survey to examine referral outcomes of patients referred to University of Rochester Dermatology (UR-Derm), a tertiary care university-based teaching hospital, from UR UCC between January 1, 2021, and August 31, 2022. Outcomes for healthcare referrals included patient demographics, referral completion rates, UR-Derm appointment wait times, and diagnostic concordance rates between UCC and UR-Derm. Outcomes from the provider survey included appropriateness of UCC treatment plans, appropriateness of UCC referral to UR-Derm, and feasibility of referral management by eConsult. Patients who utilized UCC were predominately white (77.0%) females (53.9%) with a mean age of 37.9 years. Most patients referred by UCC did not complete an in-person UR-Derm evaluation (58.6%). Of those who did complete a UR-Derm visit, the average wait time was 38.3 days. Only 56% of UCC and UR-Derm diagnoses were concordant. Our surveyed dermatologists deemed 30% of the UCC treatment plans appropriate. The majority of referrals (83.5%) were viewed as manageable with an eConsult with only 10% of referrals requiring in-person visit. Several practice gaps exist in specialty care delivery in UCC and additional inefficiencies exist in the urgent referral process. These gaps could be addressed by targeted educational interventions and availability of dermatology consultation to support urgent care.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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