Publication | Closed Access
Fighting fires? – emergency hospital admission and the concept of prevention
14
Citations
12
References
2000
Year
Emergency Hospital AdmissionsEmergency ManagementSafety ScienceEmergency Department AdministrationInjury PreventionEmergency CareEmergency AdmissionsHospital MedicinePrimary CarePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchEmergency ResponseHealth PolicyEmergency Care SystemsEmergency PreparednessNursingTrauma CarePatient SafetyEmergency Medical ServiceOut-of-hospital Emergency Medical ServiceSocial Emergency MedicineMedicineEmergency Medicine
Although the UK's health and social care system has always been geared towards dealing with crises, evidence suggests that this is becoming increasingly the case. Changes in health care and the prioritisation of scarce resources have resulted in a situation where those with low level needs are often left unsupported until they experience a major life crisis. To rectify this situation, the government has introduced a range of policies designed to emphasise the need for preventive work. Against this background, this paper focuses on the issue of emergency hospital admissions, critiquing the research methodologies that have been used to investigate the scope for preventive work in this area. Despite the use of more sophisticated and objective research tools, there is a need to develop new ways of researching emergency admissions which build on the strengths of existing approaches while at the same time incorporating more of a user perspective.
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