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Understanding Low-Acuity Visits to the Pediatric Emergency Department

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Listed:
  • Ken J Farion
  • Megan Wright
  • Roger Zemek
  • Gina Neto
  • Anna Karwowska
  • Sandra Tse
  • Sarah Reid
  • Mona Jabbour
  • Stephanie Poirier
  • Katherine A Moreau
  • Nicholas Barrowman

Abstract

Background: Canadian pediatric emergency department visits are increasing, with a disproportionate increase in low-acuity visits locally (33% of volume in 2008-09, 41% in 2011-12). We sought to understand: 1) presentation patterns and resource implications; 2) parents’ perceptions and motivations; and 3) alternate health care options considered prior to presenting with low-acuity problems. Methods: We conducted a prospective cohort study at our tertiary pediatric emergency department serving two provinces to explore differences between patients with and without a primary care provider. During four, 2-week study periods over 1 year, parents of low-acuity visits received an anonymous survey. Presentation times, interventions, diagnoses and dispositions were captured on a data collection form linked to the survey by study number. Results: Parents completed 2,443 surveys (74.1% response rate), with survey-data collection form pairs available for 2,146 visits. Overall, 89.7% of respondents had a primary care provider; 68% were family physicians. Surprisingly, 40% of visits occurred during weekday office hours and 27.3% occurred within 4 hours of symptom onset; 67.5% of those early presenters were for injuries. Few parents sought care from their primary care provider (25%), health information line (20.7%), or urgent care clinic (18.5%); 36% reported that they believed their child’s problem required the emergency department. Forty-five percent required only a history, physical exam and reassurance; only 11% required an intervention not available in an office setting. Patients without a primary care provider were significantly more likely to present during weekday office hours (p = 0.003), have longer symptom duration (p

Suggested Citation

  • Ken J Farion & Megan Wright & Roger Zemek & Gina Neto & Anna Karwowska & Sandra Tse & Sarah Reid & Mona Jabbour & Stephanie Poirier & Katherine A Moreau & Nicholas Barrowman, 2015. "Understanding Low-Acuity Visits to the Pediatric Emergency Department," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(6), pages 1-16, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0128927
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0128927
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