• Acad Emerg Med · Mar 2004

    Comparative Study

    Impact of ambulance transportation on resource use in the emergency department.

    • Adrian Marinovich, Jonathan Afilalo, Marc Afilalo, Antoinette Colacone, Bernard Unger, Claudine Giguère, Ruth Léger, Xiaoqing Xue, Jean-François Boivin, and Elizabeth MacNamara.
    • McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
    • Acad Emerg Med. 2004 Mar 1;11(3):312-5.

    ObjectiveTo determine how ambulance transportation is associated with resource use in the emergency department (ED).MethodsA retrospective administrative database review of patient visits to a Montreal tertiary care hospital ED in one year (April 2000-March 2001). Measures of resource use included ED length of stay, admission to the hospital, and whether consultations and radiology/imaging tests (excluding plain-film x-rays) were ordered from the ED.ResultsDuring the study period, 39,674 patients made 59,142 visits to the ED. Ambulance transportation was used for 15.6% of these ED visits. Compared with non-ambulance visits, ambulance visits were more likely to be made by older patients (mean age: 68 vs. 47 years), to be made by females (59% vs. 55%), to have a greater triage urgency score (mean on 1-5 scale, with 1 most urgent: 2.7 vs. 3.9), and to occur after office hours, 5 PM to 9 AM (47% vs. 43%). Ambulance visits were also more likely than non-ambulance visits to result in: a longer length of stay (mean: 13.3 hours [95% CI = 13.0 to 13.6] vs. 5.9 [95% CI = 5.8 to 6.0]), hospital admission (40% vs. 10%) (odds ratio [OR]: 5.94 [95% CI = 5.59 to 6.33]), consultations (56% vs. 20%) (OR: 5.15 [95% = 4.86 to 5.45]), and radiology/imaging tests (20% vs. 12%) (OR: 1.93 [95% CI = 1.81 to 2.07]). In multivariate models that adjusted for the effects of age, gender, triage urgency, and temporal factors, ambulance transportation maintained its association with greater resource use.ConclusionsThis preliminary study indicates that patients arriving at the ED by ambulance use significantly more resources than their walk-in counterparts.

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