Status of Emergency Department Seventy-Two Hour Return Visits Among Homeless Patients

We aim to externally validate the status of emergency department (ED) appropriate utilization and 72-h ED returns among homeless patients. This is a retrospective single-center observational study. Patients were divided into two groups (homeless versus non-homeless). Patients' general character...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of clinical medicine research Vol. 11; no. 3; pp. 157 - 164
Main Authors: Knowles, Heidi, Huggins, Charles, Robinson, Richard D, Mbugua, Rosalia, Laureano-Phillips, Jessica, Trivedi, Shrunjal M, Kirby, Jessica, Zenarosa, Nestor R, Wang, Hao
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Canada Elmer Press 01-03-2019
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Summary:We aim to externally validate the status of emergency department (ED) appropriate utilization and 72-h ED returns among homeless patients. This is a retrospective single-center observational study. Patients were divided into two groups (homeless versus non-homeless). Patients' general characteristics, clinical variables, ED appropriate utilization, and ED return disposition deviations were compared and analyzed separately. Study enrolled a total of 63,990 ED visits. Homeless patients comprised 9.3% (5,926) of visits. Higher ED 72-h returns occurred among homeless patients in comparison to the non-homeless patients (17% versus 5%, P < 0.001). Rate of significant ED disposition deviations (e.g., admission, triage to operation room, or death) on return visits were lower in homeless patients when compared to non-homeless patient populations (15% versus 23%, P < 0.001). Though ED return rate was higher among homeless patients, return visit case management seems appropriate, indicating that 72-h ED returns might not be an optimal healthcare quality measurement for homeless patients.
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ISSN:1918-3003
1918-3011
DOI:10.14740/jocmr3747