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A web-based generalist-specialist system to improve scheduling of outpatient specialty consultations in an academic center.

Authors :
Weiner, Michael
Hoyek, Georges El
Wang, Lynnette
Dexter, Paul R.
Zerr, Ann D.
Perkins, Anthony J.
James, Felgrace
Juneja, Rattan
El Hoyek, Georges
Source :
JGIM: Journal of General Internal Medicine; Jun2009, Vol. 24 Issue 6, p710-715, 6p, 5 Charts
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>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.<bold>Objective: </bold>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.<bold>Design: </bold>Staggered implementation of a quality-improvement project, with comparison of intervention and control groups.<bold>Participants: </bold>Patients 21 or more years of age referred from any of 11 primary-care clinics to any of 25 specialty clinics.<bold>Interventions: </bold>Faxed referrals were replaced by a Web-based application shared by generalists and specialists, with enhanced communications and automated notification to the specialty office.<bold>Measurements: </bold>We compared scheduling before and after implementation and time from referral to appointment. A logistic regression analysis adjusted for demographics.<bold>Main Results: </bold>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.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>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. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08848734
Volume :
24
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
JGIM: Journal of General Internal Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39879112
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-009-0971-3