Nurse-Led Call Back Program to Improve Patient Follow-Up With Providers After Discharge From the Emergency Department

Author:

Luciani-McGillivray Ines1ORCID,Cushing Julie1,Klug Rebecca1,Lee Hang2,Cahill Jennifer E3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nursing, Massachusetts General Hospital Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, MA, USA

2. Biostatistics Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA

3. Yvonne L. Munn Center for Nursing Research, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA

Abstract

Phone calls to patients after discharge from the emergency department (ED) serve as reminders to schedule medical follow-up, support adherence to discharge instructions, and reduce revisits to already-crowded EDs. An existing, nurse-administered, call-back program contacted randomly selected ED patients 24 to 48 hours following discharge. This program did not improve patient follow-up (48.68%) nor reduce the ED revisit rate (6.7% baseline vs 6.0% postimplementation). Plan-Do-Study-Act methodology tested a modification to the existing program consisting of a second, scripted phone call from a trained volunteer at 72 to 96 hours postdischarge. Volunteers utilized a patient list and script, and nurses provided expertise to eliminate identified barriers to follow-up. Follow-up rate and ED revisit were monitored through the electronic medical record. A total of 894 patients participated between October 2017 and June 2018. Follow-up increased from 48.68% to 65.5% ( P < .0001) and ED revisit decreased significantly (4.5% vs 8.6%, P < .001). This innovative nurse-led, systematic postdischarge call-back program utilizing hospital volunteers increased patient compliance with post-ED medical follow-up while significantly reducing the rate of patient revisit to the ED within 7 days of discharge.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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