Abstract

PurposeWe present our single-institution experience with the development of a same day access scheduling initiative for an outpatient radiation oncology unit, focusing on its potential influence on ameliorating racial disparities. Methods and materialsFrom March 2021 to August 2022, a pilot initiative was conducted such that all new patients referred to a tertiary care-based radiation oncology department were offered the ability to be seen as a same day consultation. The timespan of this analysis was categorized into 2 distinct successive periods over 36 months—a 18-month pre-initiative period (September 2019 to February 2021) and another subsequent one (March 2021 to August 2022). Descriptive statistics were used to study the impact of this initiative on access-related benchmarks. ResultsA total of 2897 patients were referred. Among the 2107 patients scheduled, three hundred and sixteen (15 %) opted for same day appointments. Black, Latino, and Asian patients were significantly more likely to use the same day access initiative versus Caucasian patients (p = 0.01). The same day access initiative increased the proportion of patients seen within 5 days from referral from 8 % to 34 % for Blacks, 12–57 % for Latinos, and 18–67 % for Asians, compared to 39–55 % for Caucasians (p < 0.001). The no-show rate was reduced from 20 % to 7 % and 14–5 %, for Black and Latino patients, respectively (p < 0.001). ConclusionsThe implementation of a same day access initiative narrowed disparities with respect to access-related benchmarks.

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