Abstract

BackgroundEmergency department (ED) consultations are on the rise, and frequently consultations by non-urgent patients have been held accountable. Self-referred walk-in (SRW) consulters supposedly represent a predominantly less urgent patient population. The EMACROSS study aimed to explore consultation determinants and motives in SRW patients with respiratory symptoms.MethodsMulticenter survey of adult ED patients with respiratory complaints in eight emergency departments in central Berlin, Germany. Secondary hospital records data including diagnoses was additionally assessed. Characteristics of SRW and non-SRW patients were compared. Determinants of SRW consultation were evaluated by binary logistic regression. Consultation motives were analyzed descriptively. As a supplemental approach, network analysis (lasso-regularized mixed graphical model) was performed to explore connections between consultation determinants, consultation features and motives.ResultsBetween June 2017 and November 2018, n = 472 participants were included, the median age was 55 years (range 18–96), 53.2% of patients were male and n = 185 cases (39.2%) were SRW consulters. The SRW group showed lower proportions of potentially severe (pneumonia and respiratory failure, p < 0.001, χ2 test) and chronic pulmonary conditions. Determinants of SRW consultation identified by logistic regression were younger age (p < 0.001), tertiary education (p = 0.032), being a first-generation migrant (p = 0.002) or tourist (p = 0.008), having no regular primary care provider (p = 0.036) and no chronic pulmonary illness (p = 0.017). The area under the curve (AUC) for the model was 0.79. Personal distress and access problems in ambulatory care were stated most frequently as consultation motives in the SRW group; network analysis showed the scarcity of associations between demographic and medical SRW determinants and motives triggering the actual decision to consult.ConclusionsAs to “who” consults, this study identified demographic and medical predictors of SRW utilization. The said markers seem only remotely connected to “why” people decide for SRW visits. To alleviate ED crowding by addressing frequent SRW consultation motives, interventions focused on the ability for symptom self-assessment and at better-accessible alternative care seem sensible.Trial registrationGerman Clinical Trials Register (DRKS00011930); date: 2017/04/25.

Highlights

  • Emergency department (ED) consultations are on the rise, and frequently consultations by nonurgent patients have been held accountable

  • The said markers seem only remotely connected to “why” people decide for Self-referred walk-in (SRW) visits

  • To alleviate ED crowding by addressing frequent SRW consultation motives, interventions focused on the ability for symptom self-assessment and at better-accessible alternative care seem sensible

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding care demands as well as consultation patterns and triggers is of vital importance to allow for developing sensible solutions to the pressing problem of ED overuse: we need to better comprehend who these consulters are, what groups of society they belong to, and what they hope to gain by turning to the ED with certain complaints. This may greatly help in devising future care structures both demand-oriented – as acceptance on the patient side is central – and resource-sparing

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