Abstract

Background: In a tertiary care hospital that caters to all kinds of patients in the clinical and emergency setting, consultation is an important service provided by the urology team. Profiling the spectrum of urologic disease encountered by trainees will assist in the planning of residency curricula and is bound to improve patient outcome for procedural education.Methods: All urologic consultation requests received over a period of three months (November 22, 2019, to February 22, 2020) were identified and recorded in a prospectively maintained consult log. Information collected for each encounter included the time, date, reason for consult, primary service and diagnosis along with the final urologic diagnosis, any urologic intervention, and basic patient demographics (gender and age).Results: Over three months, a total of 568 consult requests were reviewed. Of the patients consulted for, 74% were males; the mean age was 58.45 years (SD+/-19.5 years). The most common service seeking urology consult was the Emergency Room (n=240, 42.25%). The most common reason for consultation was hematuria (n=103, 18.13%) followed by obstructive uropathy (n=98, 17.25%). The majority (n=147, 26%) of the calls were placed between mid-day and 4 pm. Of the total, 26% required immediate attention. Urologic intervention was required in 226 (39.8%). The number of consults seen by junior team members was 478 (84.14%).Conclusion: Hematuria and obstructive uropathy are the most common reasons for urologic consultation requests. Nearly two-thirds of the consults either required immediate attention or intervention. Most of the consults were seen by junior residents, who required elaborate training to address these common issues independently. We believe that our results will be helpful in developing a curriculum for training junior residents.

Highlights

  • Clinical consultation requests to a specialty on-call team are an important component of large multispecialty hospital practice

  • Urology consults can broadly be classified into those requiring immediate attention or the ones that can be seen within a few hours

  • The type of consultation request may differ depending upon the patient population and the primary service requesting for urology to be on board [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical consultation requests to a specialty on-call team are an important component of large multispecialty hospital practice. Data regarding consultation requests to urology is limited and often involves an investigation of consultations for iatrogenic catheter injuries, where authors highlight the inadequacy of an intern's training to handle such emergencies [2]. Adequate profiling and “triage” of urologic consults as encountered by the on-call residents can help in the development of a standardized curriculum to improve patient outcomes and junior staff member training. In a tertiary care hospital that caters to all kinds of patients in the clinical and emergency setting, consultation is an important service provided by the urology team. Profiling the spectrum of urologic disease encountered by trainees will assist in the planning of residency curricula and is bound to improve patient outcome for procedural education

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