Abstract

In France, the number of emergency department (ED) admissions doubled between 1996 and 2016. To cope with the resulting crowding situation, redirecting patients to new healthcare services was considered a viable solution which would spread demand more evenly across available healthcare delivery points and render care more efficient. The objective of this study was to analyze the impact of opening new on-demand care services based on variations in patient flow at a large hospital emergency department. We performed a before-and-after study investigating the use of unscheduled care services in the Aube region in eastern France, that focused on ED attendance at Troyes Hospital. A hierarchical clustering based on co-occurrence of diagnoses was applied which divided the population into different multimorbidity profiles. Temporal trends of the resultant clusters were also studied empirically and using regression models. A multivariate logistic regression model was constructed to adjust the periodic effect for appropriate confounders and therefore confirm its presence. In total, 120,722 visits to the ED were recorded over a 24-month period (2018-2019) and 16 clusters were identified, accounting for 94.76% of all visits. There was a decrease of 56.77 visits per week in seven specific clusters and an increase of use of unscheduled health care services by 328.12 visits per week. Using an innovative and reliable methodology to evaluate changes in patient flow through the ED, these findings may help inform public health policy experts on the implementation of unscheduled care services to ease pressure on hospital EDs.

Highlights

  • Admissions to emergency departments (EDs) in France doubled between 1996 and 2016, increasing from 10 to 20 million visits annually corresponding to an average growth of 3.5% per year [1]

  • Our results showed a decrease in the probability of belonging to seven clusters after the opening of Unscheduled Care Service (UCS), that is the recourses for the type of health problem entailed by these clusters has decreased in proportion

  • As illustrated in S1 Fig and shown by the Poisson regression model in S3 Table, the temporal variations in the patient profiles of the two clusters are only due to seasonal variations notably during the winter periods of epidemics and crowding of the ED that are more present in the after period, rather than a tangible trend related to the opening of UCS

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Summary

Introduction

Admissions to emergency departments (EDs) in France doubled between 1996 and 2016, increasing from 10 to 20 million visits annually corresponding to an average growth of 3.5% per year [1]. This led to the crowding and saturation of EDs and has, to date, had negative impact on the quality of care [2] as well as on the working conditions of healthcare professionals (HCPs). To cope with the resulting crowding situation, redirecting patients to new healthcare services was considered a viable solution which would spread demand more evenly across available healthcare delivery points and render care more efficient.

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