ParallelED—A novel screening and referral intervention using emergency department wait times to identify and address unmet social needs

Author:

Purakal John123ORCID,Moon Gene4,Lee Grace4,Yuan Matthew4,Dukkipati Haripriya4,Zheng James J.4ORCID,Verma Amitesh4,Spratt Susan56,Prvu Bettger Janet27

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine Duke University School of Medicine Durham North Carolina USA

2. Duke‐Margolis Center for Health Policy Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

3. Samuel Dubois Cook Center on Social Equity Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

4. Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

5. Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism, and Nutrition Duke University School of Medicine Durham North Carolina USA

6. Population Health Management Office Duke University Durham North Carolina United States

7. Department of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences Temple University Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPeople arriving at the emergency department (ED) often have unmet health‐related social needs (HRSN). We implemented an intervention that used undergraduate student volunteers to screen patients in the ED waiting room (WR) for unmet social drivers of health and subsequently referred patients to community resources.MethodsThis cross‐sectional quality improvement study included patients who were approached to complete a HRSN screening questionnaire, subsequently referred to community resources, and followed up by phone from October 2021 to October 2022 in an ED WR of an academic medical center. Primary measures were the proportions of patients who had unmet HRSN and the proportions enrolled in a statewide database of social care resources—NCCARE360. Patient demographics and geospatial distribution were also assessed to better understand the population served.ResultsOur intervention reached 3297 unique patients, with 398 patients (12%) agreeing to complete screening. Of those screened, 93% were positive for at least one social need and 95% of the aforementioned were interested in receiving assistance. A total of 60% of those who screened positive were enrolled into NCCARE360. Persons identifying as female or non‐Hispanic Black were disproportionately represented at a higher rate among those who screened positive for at least one social need, with food and housing insecurity emerging as the most common referral categories.ConclusionOur results demonstrate patients’ willingness to be screened in the ED WR and a high identification of HRSN. Our findings show that idle time in the ED WR can be used to identify patients with unmet HRSN and refer them to resources.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Emergency Medicine

Reference34 articles.

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