Emergency Department Utilization Report to Decrease Visits by Pediatric Gastroenterology Patients

Author:

Lee Jarone123,Greenspan Peter T.34,Israel Esther4,Katz Aubrey4,Fasano Alessio4,Kaafarani Haytham M.A.2,Linov Pamela L.3,Raja Ali S.1,Rao Sandhya K.35

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Emergency Medicine,

2. Surgery, and

3. Massachusetts General Physicians Organization, Boston, Massachusetts; and

4. MassGeneral Hospital for Children, Boston, Massachusetts

5. Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts;

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Emergency department (ED) utilization is a major driver of health care costs. Specialist physicians have an important role in addressing ED utilization, especially at highly specialized, academic medical centers. We sought to investigate whether reporting of ED utilization to specialist physicians can decrease ED visits. METHODS: This study analyzed an intervention to reduce ED utilization among ED patients who were followed by pediatric gastroenterologists. In May 2013, each pediatric gastroenterologist began receiving reports with rates of ED use by their patients. The reports generated discussion that resulted in a cultural and process change in which patients with urgent gastrointestinal (GI)-related complaints were preferentially seen in the office. Using control charts, we examined GI-related and all-diagnoses ED use over a 2-year period. RESULTS: The rate of GI-related ED visits decreased by 60% after the intervention, from 4.89 to 1.95 per 1000 office visits (P < .001). Similarly, rates of GI-related ED visits during office hours decreased by 59% from 2.19 to 0.89 per 1000 (P < .001). Rates of all-diagnoses ED visits did not change. CONCLUSIONS: Physician-level reporting of ED utilization to pediatric gastroenterologists was associated with physician engagement and a cultural and process change to preferentially treat patients with urgent issues in the office.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference12 articles.

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