Emergency department primary contact physiotherapists improve patient flow for musculoskeletal patients

2013 ◽  
Vol 20 (8) ◽  
pp. 396-402 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mandy Guengerich ◽  
Kim Brock ◽  
Susan Cotton ◽  
Sam Mancuso
2021 ◽  
Vol 108 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
T Havenhand ◽  
L Hoggett ◽  
A Bhutta

Abstract Introduction COVID-19 has dictated a shift towards virtual clinics. Pennine Acute Hospitals NHS Trust serves over a million patients with a significant number of face-to-face fracture clinics. Introduction of a Virtual Fracture Clinic (VFC) reduces hospital return rates and improves patient experience. The referral data can be used to give immediate monthly feedback to the referring department to further improving patient flow. Method Prospective data was collected for all referrals to VFC during March 2020. Data included referral diagnosis, actual diagnosis, referrers grade, and final outcome. Results 630 referrals were made to VFC. 347 (55%) of those referrals were directly discharged without the need for physical consultation. Of these 114 (32%) were injuries which can be discharged by the Emergency Department with an advice leaflet using existing pathways. Of the remaining discharges 102 (29%) were query fractures or sprains; and 135 (39%) were minor fractures; which needed only advice via a letter and no face to face follow up. Conclusions Implementation of VFC leads to a decrease in physical appointments by 55% saving 347 face to face appointments. The new system has also facilitated effective audit of referrals in order to further improve patient flow from the Emergency Department via feedback mechanisms and education.


Author(s):  
Charles Greenbury ◽  
Lalarukh Asim ◽  
Hannah Baynes ◽  
Rachael Claire Mitchell

Introduction of ‘One Queue’ to our paediatric emergency department (PED)—changing to a single-stream triage destination in PED to improve patient flow, clinician experience and team cohesion.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. e263
Author(s):  
Kevin P. Carney ◽  
Ann Crespin ◽  
Gray Woerly ◽  
Nicholas Brethouwer ◽  
Jeff Baucum ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. emermed-2020-209425
Author(s):  
Benjamin Bodnar ◽  
Erin M Kane ◽  
Hetal Rupani ◽  
Henry Michtalik ◽  
Veena G Billioux ◽  
...  

BackgroundEmergency department (ED) boarding time is associated with increased length of stay (LOS) and inpatient mortality. Despite the documented impact of ED boarding on inpatient outcomes, a disparity continues to exist between the attention paid to the issue by inpatient and ED providers. A perceived lack of high yield strategies to address ED boarding from the perspective of the inpatient provider may discourage involvement in improvement initiatives on the subject. As such, further work is needed to identify inpatient metrics and strategies to address patient flow problems, and which may improve ED boarding time.MethodsAfter initial system analysis, our multidisciplinary quality improvement (QI) group defined the process time metric ‘bed downtime’—the time from which a bed is vacated by a discharged patient to the time an ED patient is assigned to that bed. Using the Lean Sigma QI approach, this metric was targeted for improvement on the internal medicine hospitalist service at a tertiary care academic medical centre.InterventionsInterventions included improving inpatient provider awareness of the problem, real-time provider notification of empty beds, a weekly retrospective emailed performance dashboard and the creation of a guideline document for admission procedures.ResultsThis package of interventions was associated with a 125 min reduction in mean bed downtime for incoming ED patients (254 min to 129 min) admitted to the intervention unit.ConclusionUse of the bed downtime metric as a QI target was associated with marked improvements in process time during our project. The use of this metric may enhance the ability of inpatient providers to participate in QI efforts to improve patient flow from the ED. Further study is needed to determine if use of the metric may be effective at reducing boarding time without requiring alterations to LOS or discharge patterns.


2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 993-997 ◽  
Author(s):  
Flora Fei-Fei Yau ◽  
Tsung-Cheng Tsai ◽  
Yan-Ren Lin ◽  
Kuan-Han Wu ◽  
Yuan-Jhen Syue ◽  
...  

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