Author:
Siminski Peter,Bezzina Andrew J,Lago Luise P,Eagar Kathy
Abstract
Primary care presentations at emergency departments
(EDs) have been the subject of much
attention in recent years. This paper is a demographic
analysis using administrative data from
the Emergency Department Information System
(EDIS) for 2005 of such presentations in New
South Wales EDs and of self-reported reasons for
presentation. Age and sex differences in the reasons
given by patients for such presentations are
analysed using data from a survey of patients
conducted in a subset of EDs in 2004.
The rate of ?potential primary care? presentations
varies greatly with age and to a lesser extent with
sex. Almost half (47%) of these presentations are
made by people under 25 years of age. Children
aged 0?4 years account for 14% of the total. The
pattern is distinctly different to the corresponding
rate of ED presentations that do not fit the ?potential
primary care? definition. Reasons given for ?potential
primary care? presentations are consistent
across all age groups, reflecting self-assessed
urgency, access to diagnostics and self-assessed
complexity. Older ?primary care? patients are particularly
unlikely to give reasons associated with GP
affordability or availability for their presentations.
Young adults? responses are consistent with the
overall population, and children under the age of
five seem most susceptible to availability issues.
Cited by
32 articles.
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