1. A web-based generalist-specialist system to improve scheduling of outpatient specialty consultations in an academic center.
- Author
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Weiner M, El Hoyek G, Wang L, Dexter PR, Zerr AD, Perkins AJ, James F, and Juneja R
- Subjects
- Academic Medical Centers methods, Academic Medical Centers standards, Adult, Aged, Ambulatory Care methods, Female, Humans, Male, Medicine methods, Middle Aged, Outpatient Clinics, Hospital standards, Young Adult, Ambulatory Care standards, Appointments and Schedules, Internet standards, Medicine standards, Physicians, Family standards, Referral and Consultation standards
- Abstract
Background: Failed referrals for specialty care are common and often represent medical errors. Technological structures and processes account for many failures. Scheduling appointments for subspecialty evaluation is a first step in outpatient referral and consultation., Objective: We determined whether moving from paper-based referrals to a Web-based system with automated tracking features was associated with greater scheduling of appointments among referred patients., Design: Staggered implementation of a quality-improvement project, with comparison of intervention and control groups., Participants: Patients 21 or more years of age referred from any of 11 primary-care clinics to any of 25 specialty clinics., Interventions: Faxed referrals were replaced by a Web-based application shared by generalists and specialists, with enhanced communications and automated notification to the specialty office., Measurements: We compared scheduling before and after implementation and time from referral to appointment. A logistic regression analysis adjusted for demographics., Main Results: Among 40,487 referrals, 54% led to scheduled specialty visits before intervention, compared to 83% with intervention. The median time to appointment was 168 days without intervention and 78 days with intervention. Scheduling increased more when duplicate referrals were not generated (54% for single orders, 24% for multiple orders). After adjustment, referrals with the intervention were more than twice as likely to have scheduled visits., Conclusions: With a new Web-based referrals system, referrals were more than twice as likely to lead to a scheduled visit. This system improves access to specialty medical services.
- Published
- 2009
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