High-users of Pediatric Emergency Room Department: who, how and why

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Botelho, Gabriela
Data de Publicação: 2019
Outros Autores: Santiago Gonçalves, Catarina, Belo, Nídia, Gomes, Susana
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: https://doi.org/10.25754/pjp.2019.14823
Resumo: Introduction: The number of visits to emergency departments has increased over time, and Portugal has the higher number of admissions per capita. The aims were to characterize the high-user population of a level II hospital (≥10 admissions/year), identify the profile of the high-user and develop strategies to decrease the possible wrongful access. Methods: Retrospective, case-control study. Children under 18 years old at the end of 2017 were selected. Controls were considered children with ≤three admissions. In the statistical analysis was considered p≤0.005 Results: There were 66 children identified as high users (0,7% of the total users, responsible for 810 admissions). Of these, 66.7% was younger than three years old and 40% were chronic patients. Three per cent were preceded by a primary care consultation/Saúde 24, 70% were non urgent, and only 8% were admitted to the infirmary. The control group had a median of eight years old, higher use of primary care consultation/Saúde 24 (20%) and 80% used the emergency room for non-urgent motives. Discussion: In both groups the emergency room is used as the main form of access to healthcare, the utilization of primary care consultation was low and the motives non-urgent. Young age (OR=6,75) and chronic disease (OR=4.69) were risk factors to higher use. Approach to primary care services, further teaching of which symptoms need hospital evaluation and the creation of other access paths to chronic patients may help to restrain the unnecessary use.
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spelling High-users of Pediatric Emergency Room Department: who, how and whyHigh-Users of Pediatric Emergency Room: Who, How and WhyOriginal articlesIntroduction: The number of visits to emergency departments has increased over time, and Portugal has the higher number of admissions per capita. The aims were to characterize the high-user population of a level II hospital (≥10 admissions/year), identify the profile of the high-user and develop strategies to decrease the possible wrongful access. Methods: Retrospective, case-control study. Children under 18 years old at the end of 2017 were selected. Controls were considered children with ≤three admissions. In the statistical analysis was considered p≤0.005 Results: There were 66 children identified as high users (0,7% of the total users, responsible for 810 admissions). Of these, 66.7% was younger than three years old and 40% were chronic patients. Three per cent were preceded by a primary care consultation/Saúde 24, 70% were non urgent, and only 8% were admitted to the infirmary. The control group had a median of eight years old, higher use of primary care consultation/Saúde 24 (20%) and 80% used the emergency room for non-urgent motives. Discussion: In both groups the emergency room is used as the main form of access to healthcare, the utilization of primary care consultation was low and the motives non-urgent. Young age (OR=6,75) and chronic disease (OR=4.69) were risk factors to higher use. Approach to primary care services, further teaching of which symptoms need hospital evaluation and the creation of other access paths to chronic patients may help to restrain the unnecessary use.Introdução: O afluxo à urgência, sobretudo de situações não urgentes, é uma tendência crescente, sendo que Portugal se destaca com o maior número de admissões per capita. Os nossos objectivos foram caracterizar a população hiperfrequentadora de um hospital de nível II (≥10 admissões/ano), identificar o perfil do hiperfrequentador e estabelecer estratégias para diminuir o eventual acesso indevido. Métodos: Estudo retrospectivo, caso-controlo das crianças hiperfrequentadoras durante 2017. Foram selecionadas as crianças com idade inferior a 18 anos e consideraram-se controlos ≤três admissões. Na análise estatística considerou-se significativo p≤ 0.05. Resultados: Foram identificadas 66 crianças como hiperfrequentadoras (0,7% dos utilizadores do SU, responsáveis por 810 episódios de urgência (4% das admissões). Destas, 66,7% tinham idade menor que três anos e 40% eram portadores de doença crónica. Três por cento dos episódios foram precedidos por consulta de cuidados de saúde primários/Saúde24, 70% eram pouco urgentes e a taxa de internamento foi baixa (8%). Os controlos têm mediana de oito anos, maior recurso aos cuidados de saúde primários/Saúde24 (20%) e 80% recorre por motivos pouco urgentes. Discussão: Em ambos os grupos a urgência é utilizada como primeiro acesso aos cuidados de saúde, a procura dos cuidados de saúde primários foi residual e os motivos de admissão frequentemente não urgentes. Idade precoce (OR=6,75) e doença crónica (OR=4.69) são factores de risco para maio utilização. A aproximação da população aos cuidados de saúde primários, a existência de outras vias de acesso para doentes crónicos e o melhor esclarecimento sobre a doença poderão contribuir para a redução deste acesso excessivo.Sociedade Portuguesa de Pediatria2019-04-29info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/articlehttps://doi.org/10.25754/pjp.2019.14823eng2184-44532184-3333Botelho, GabrielaSantiago Gonçalves, CatarinaBelo, NídiaGomes, Susanainfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAP2023-08-03T02:57:54Zoai:ojs.revistas.rcaap.pt:article/14823Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-19T20:25:29.616683Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv High-users of Pediatric Emergency Room Department: who, how and why
High-Users of Pediatric Emergency Room: Who, How and Why
title High-users of Pediatric Emergency Room Department: who, how and why
spellingShingle High-users of Pediatric Emergency Room Department: who, how and why
Botelho, Gabriela
Original articles
title_short High-users of Pediatric Emergency Room Department: who, how and why
title_full High-users of Pediatric Emergency Room Department: who, how and why
title_fullStr High-users of Pediatric Emergency Room Department: who, how and why
title_full_unstemmed High-users of Pediatric Emergency Room Department: who, how and why
title_sort High-users of Pediatric Emergency Room Department: who, how and why
author Botelho, Gabriela
author_facet Botelho, Gabriela
Santiago Gonçalves, Catarina
Belo, Nídia
Gomes, Susana
author_role author
author2 Santiago Gonçalves, Catarina
Belo, Nídia
Gomes, Susana
author2_role author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Botelho, Gabriela
Santiago Gonçalves, Catarina
Belo, Nídia
Gomes, Susana
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Original articles
topic Original articles
description Introduction: The number of visits to emergency departments has increased over time, and Portugal has the higher number of admissions per capita. The aims were to characterize the high-user population of a level II hospital (≥10 admissions/year), identify the profile of the high-user and develop strategies to decrease the possible wrongful access. Methods: Retrospective, case-control study. Children under 18 years old at the end of 2017 were selected. Controls were considered children with ≤three admissions. In the statistical analysis was considered p≤0.005 Results: There were 66 children identified as high users (0,7% of the total users, responsible for 810 admissions). Of these, 66.7% was younger than three years old and 40% were chronic patients. Three per cent were preceded by a primary care consultation/Saúde 24, 70% were non urgent, and only 8% were admitted to the infirmary. The control group had a median of eight years old, higher use of primary care consultation/Saúde 24 (20%) and 80% used the emergency room for non-urgent motives. Discussion: In both groups the emergency room is used as the main form of access to healthcare, the utilization of primary care consultation was low and the motives non-urgent. Young age (OR=6,75) and chronic disease (OR=4.69) were risk factors to higher use. Approach to primary care services, further teaching of which symptoms need hospital evaluation and the creation of other access paths to chronic patients may help to restrain the unnecessary use.
publishDate 2019
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2019-04-29
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