Abstract

To assess whether a formal collaboration between a non-surgical, community epilepsy center and a surgical, tertiary-care epilepsy center can improve patient progress throughout the pre-surgical referral process, and to elucidate predictors of referral completion among inter-center referrals. The inter-center referral process was tracked, and the number of patients completing surgical conference (primary outcome) and epilepsy surgery at the tertiary center were collected and compared in the 45-month immediate pre/post-collaboration periods. Demographic and clinical variables were collected on post-collaboration inter-center patient referrals to explore factors associated with completion of the referral process. Compared to the pre-collaboration period, the proportion of tertiary center epilepsy surgery conference patients referred from the community epilepsy center increased from 3/88 to 14/113 (263% increase, p=.01) during the post-collaboration period. The proportion of patients completing surgery via the community to tertiary referral process increased from 2/63 pre-collaboration to 8/71 post-collaboration (254% increase, p=.04). Referral completion was associated with higher seizure frequency, shorter travel distance, private insurance status and positive employment status (p<0.05). Collaboration agreements between community and tertiary-care epilepsy centers may improve patient completion of the epilepsy surgery referral process. Implementation of similar programs at other centers may be beneficial in reducing the epilepsy surgery gap.

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