Comparison of Patients' Admissions to the Cardiology Outpatient Clinics Between the Appointment System and the Queue System

The appointment system has been developed and implemented to eliminate di culties with queued admissions. To identify and eliminate admission gaps, this study examined the characteristics of patients who applied to the cardiology outpatient clinic via appointment and queue systems. The study compris...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Turk Kardiyoloji Dernegi arsivi : Turk Kardiyoloji Derneginin yayin organidir Vol. 51; no. 3; pp. 188 - 195
Main Authors: Solmaz, Hatice, Uluda, Burcu
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Turkey 01-04-2023
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Summary:The appointment system has been developed and implemented to eliminate di culties with queued admissions. To identify and eliminate admission gaps, this study examined the characteristics of patients who applied to the cardiology outpatient clinic via appointment and queue systems. The study comprised 2135 cardiology outpatients. Patients were divided into 2 groups based on whether they used appointments (group 1) or the queue (group 2). Both groups' and non-cardiac diagnosed patients' demographic, clinical, and presentational variables were compared. Comparing patients' characteristics by appointment-to-visit time was also done. There were 1088 female participants (51%). Female gender (54.8%) and individuals aged 18 64 (69.8%) years were signi cantly higher in group 1. While the rate of rst admission (P = 0.003) patients was signi cantly higher in group 1, the rate of patients followed up (P = 0.003) and disabled (P = 0.011) was signi cantly higher in group 2. Patients' rate with non-cardiac complaints was 40.2% in group 1, but it was signi cantly lower in group 2 at 22.2% than in group 1 (P = 0.001). Admissions to the emergency department within the last month were signi cantly higher in group 2 than group 1 (P = 0.021), this rate was signi cantly higher in favor of group 1 (P =.031) in patients with non-cardiac diagnoses. In addition, patients who requested a general examination and had no complaints were signi cantly higher in group 1 than in group 2 (P = 0.003). Comparing the post-examination diagnoses, it was shown that group 2 (76.3%) had a higher rate of cardiac diagnoses than group 1 (51.5%). The presence of cardiac-related complaints (P = 0.009) and appointment-to-visit time 15 days (P = 0.013) were found to be signi cant independent predictors of admission to the emergency department. The rates of patients with cardiac-related complaints (40.8%) and patients under follow-up (63%) were higher in the group with a gap of 15 days between appointment-to-visit time. Prioritizing patients by complaints, clinical features, medical history, or cardiovascular risk factors can enhance appointment scheduling.
ISSN:1016-5169
1308-4488
DOI:10.5543/tkda.2023.84343