Publication | Closed Access
Patients Who Presented to an Australian Emergency Department and Did Not Wait or Left Against Medical Advice
17
Citations
29
References
2012
Year
NursingPalliative CareAustralian Hospital EdPrimary CarePediatric Emergency MedicineEmergency Medicine TraumaPatient SafetyEmergency Department AdministrationOutcomes ResearchPost-emergency DepartmentOut-of-hospital Emergency Medical ServiceDeparture Medical RequirementsMedicineEmergency CareHealth Services ResearchAustralian Emergency DepartmentEmergency MedicineHospital Medicine
This study aimed to describe characteristics, outcomes, and post-emergency department (ED) departure medical requirements of patients who did not wait (DNW) or left against medical advice (LAMA) after presenting to an Australian hospital ED over a 6-month period. This was a prospective cohort follow-up study. Children and adults were compared in terms of ED characteristics and outcomes. Of the 32,333 patient presentations, 3,293 (10.2%) were recorded as DNW and 470 (1.5%) as LAMA. Of the DNW/LAMA presentations, 1,303 (34.6%) received a telephone call. One in four of the DNW/LAMA patients were children (<16 years). Most (87%) waited longer than the recommended time before leaving the ED, the majority (56%) sought care elsewhere, and some (n = 174, 13%) re-presented to the ED within 7 days; 20 of those required hospital admission. Strategies addressing front-end ED systems are required to mitigate the proportion of patients who DNW/LAMA.
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