• Tidsskr. Nor. Laegeforen. · Feb 2004

    [337 home calls during daytime from the emergency medical center in Oslo].

    • Erling Iveland and Jørund Straand.
    • Oslo kommunale legevakt, Storgata 40, 0182 Oslo. ovrefoss.14@c2i.net
    • Tidsskr. Nor. Laegeforen. 2004 Feb 5; 124 (3): 354-7.

    BackgroundFew studies have addressed physicians' home calls in Norway. The aim of this study is to analyse home calls during daytime in Oslo in relation to patients (age, sex, district), diagnoses, request procedures, and clinical outcome.Methods And MaterialGeneral practitioners in the City of Oslo emergency medical centre recorded their home calls during three months using a standardised form.ResultsCalls to 337 patients (mean age 70, median 77 years; two thirds females; seven to children below two years of age) were recorded. The home calls were requested by relatives (36%), the patients themselves (32%), community care nurses (11%), and nursing homes (7%). The assessments made by the operators of the medical emergency telephone were generally correct. Physicians reported 77% full and 20% partial match between reported and found medical problem. The physicians assessed that 22% of the patients would have been able to go and see a doctor. 39% of all patients were admitted to hospital, 34 % needed ambulance transportation. The admitting GPs received hospital reports only after 27% of admissions.InterpretationAccess to acute home calls by a physician during daytime is a necessary function in an urban public health service.

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