• Anesthesia and analgesia · Aug 2017

    Factors Associated With Missed Appointments at an Academic Pain Treatment Center: A Prospective Year-Long Longitudinal Study.

    • Charles A Odonkor, Sandy Christiansen, Yian Chen, Asmitha Sathiyakumar, Hira Chaudhry, Denise Cinquegrana, Jessica Lange, Cathy He, and Steven P Cohen.
    • From the Departments of *Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, †Anesthesiology & Critical Care Medicine, and ‡Neurology, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland; and Departments of §Anesthesiology and ‖Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland.
    • Anesth. Analg. 2017 Aug 1; 125 (2): 562-570.

    BackgroundInterventional pain treatment centers represent an integral part of interdisciplinary care. Barriers to effective treatment include access to care and financial issues related to pain clinic operations. To address these challenges, specialty clinics have taken steps to identify and remedy missed clinic appointments. However, no prospective study has sought to identify factors associated with pain clinic "no-shows."MethodsWe performed a prospective, longitudinal year-long study in an inner-city, academic pain clinic in which patients scheduled for office visits and procedures were categorized as to whether they showed up or did not show up for their scheduled appointment without cancelling the day before. Twenty demographic (age, employment status), clinical (eg, diagnosis, duration of pain), and environmental (season, time and day of appointment) variables were assessed for their association with missing an appointment. The logistic regression model predicting no-shows was internally validated with crossvalidation and bootstrapping methods. A predictive nomogram was developed to display effect size of predictors for no-shows.ResultsNo-show data were collected on 5134 patients out of 5209 total appointments for a capture rate of 98.6%. The overall no-show rate was 24.6% and was higher in individuals who were young (<65 years), single, of ethnic minority background, received Medicare/Medicaid, had a primary diagnosis of low back pain or headaches, were seen on a day with rain or snow or for an initial consult, and had at least 1 previous pain provider. Model discrimination (area under curve) was 0.738 (99% confidence interval, 0.70-0.85). A minimum threshold of 350 points on the nomogram predicted greater than 55% risk of no-shows.ConclusionsWe found a high no-show rate, which was associated with predictable and unpredictable (eg, snow) factors. Steps to reduce the no-show rate are discussed. To maximize access to care, operation managers should consider a regression model that accounts for patient-level risk of predictable no-shows. Knowing the patient level, no-show rate can potentially help to optimize the schedule programming by staggering low- versus high-probability no-shows.

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