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Comparative Study
[Referrals to an emergency department--are there differences between self-referrals and referrals from general practitioners?].
- S Nakar, S Vinker, Y Or, M Schadel, Y Niego, and G Plotkin.
- Central District of General Sick Fund, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University.
- Harefuah. 1999 Dec 15; 137 (12): 603-6, 680.
AbstractThe Israeli health system has been undergoing major changes in recent years. Considerations of cost containment have led sick funds to open new out-of-hours services in the community to reduce visits to hospital emergency departments. Referred and self-referred visits to our emergency department during a 1-month period were studied. Patients after trauma or whose visits resulted in hospitalization were excluded. Of the 505 encounters 56.3% were of women; the average age was 52.5 +/- 19.3 years (range 18-96). 57.4% visits were during working hours of primary care clinics ("working hours"), while the others were "out-of-hours" visits. Only 52.7% had a referral letter, 75% of them from the family physician. The quality of the handwriting in 46% was good, in 44% fair and the remaining 10% were illegible. A specific clinical question was asked in only 16% of the letters. A third of "working-hours" visits were self-referrals, rising to 64% in "out-of-hours" visits (p < 0.001). The most common diagnoses in discharge letters were: chest or abdominal pain, asthma, back pain, headache, nephrolithiasis and upper respiratory tract infection. The rate of self-referrals was relatively high throughout the day. Cost-containment efforts did not seem to eliminate self-referrals with "primary care" problems. The quality of referral letters should be improved both with regard to format and content.
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