Academic Pediatrics
Volume 10, Issue 1 , Pages 70-74, January 2010

Practice Characteristics That Influence Nonurgent Pediatric Emergency Department Utilization

Departments of Pediatrics (Dr Sturm and Dr Simon) and Emergency Medicine (Dr Hirsh and Dr Simon), Emory University, Atlanta, Ga; Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, Atlanta, Ga (Dr Hirsh, Mr Massey, Dr Simon); Center for Operations Research in Medicine and HealthCare, School of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Ga (Dr Lee); and Kids Health First Pediatric Alliance, Atlanta, Ga (Dr Weselman)

Received 18 September 2008; accepted 6 October 2009.

Objective

The goal of this study was to determine what characteristics of a primary care pediatric practice are associated with nonurgent use of the pediatric emergency department (PED).

Methods

Primary care practice characteristics were prospectively collected from 33 practices. Nonurgent and urgent visits to the PED for patients from these practices were analyzed retrospectively. A discriminant analysis classification model was used to identify practice characteristics that were associated with nonurgent versus urgent utilization of the PED.

Results

Patients in the network of 33 practices accounted for 31 076 visits to the PED during the 12-month study period, 47% of which were classified as nonurgent. Based on the discriminant analysis classification model, discriminant patterns that predict the frequency of nonurgent utilization included the percentage of patients with Medicaid, total available sick slots to see patients per physician, closer distance to the PED, whether or not the nurse triage line notified all on-call physicians of disposition to the PED, whether it is practice policy to accept all walk-in sick visits, and ability of practice to have same-day turnaround of laboratory tests.

Conclusions

Nonurgent utilization of the PED by patients in a specific primary care practice can be predicted based on discriminant practice characteristics, several of which may be modifiable. Use of these predictive rules can be used to optimize pediatric services and policy to help mitigate the high volume of PED nonurgent visitation. Focused interventions on practice characteristics of significance may help reduce PED overcrowding and improve continuity of care.

Key Words: access to care, pediatric emergency department, primary care

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PII: S1876-2859(09)00274-5

doi:10.1016/j.acap.2009.10.001

Academic Pediatrics
Volume 10, Issue 1 , Pages 70-74, January 2010