A prospective evaluation of emergency patients presenting to 8-hour primary care clinics

Very little is known about the acuity case mix of patients presenting to eight-hour primary care facilities. Emergency centre triage identifies patients in urgent need of care and speeds up disposition to higher levels of care. Objectives: To describe the acuity of patients presenting to eight-hour...

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Main Author: M. Koekemoer*
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2013-12-01
Series:African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X13001699
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spelling doaj-d3eea246017f41de8e82ae0da26d25d02020-11-24T23:00:17ZengElsevierAfrican Journal of Emergency Medicine2211-419X2013-12-0134S1810.1016/j.afjem.2013.08.048A prospective evaluation of emergency patients presenting to 8-hour primary care clinicsM. Koekemoer*Very little is known about the acuity case mix of patients presenting to eight-hour primary care facilities. Emergency centre triage identifies patients in urgent need of care and speeds up disposition to higher levels of care. Objectives: To describe the acuity of patients presenting to eight-hour facilities, and to determine patient mode of arrival as well as the current triage practice. Methods: A descriptive study of patients arriving at eight-hour primary care clinics in the Western Cape was conducted at four facilities in the Western Cape for a three-month period. The triage nurses collected routine observations from all monthly unscheduled walk-inpatients seen at these facilities. The Triage Early Warning Score was then calculated and the South African Triage Scale acuity level identified and recorded. Results: A total of 1801 patients were included in the study. The total acuity distribution of the four facilities was as follow: emergency (0.3%), very urgent (15.3%), urgent (26.5%) and non-urgent (57.8%). The 2 smaller clinics (De Doorns and Heideveld) saw a higher percentage of emergency/very urgent/urgent versus non-urgent patients (85% versus 15%). Conclusions: This study shows that eight-hour primary care facilities have a large proportion of urgent patients (42%) and would benefit from a standardised emergency centre triage tool for patients. Therefore it is recommended that the South African Triage Scale be implemented at these facilities as soon as possible.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X13001699
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Koekemoer*
spellingShingle M. Koekemoer*
A prospective evaluation of emergency patients presenting to 8-hour primary care clinics
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
author_facet M. Koekemoer*
author_sort M. Koekemoer*
title A prospective evaluation of emergency patients presenting to 8-hour primary care clinics
title_short A prospective evaluation of emergency patients presenting to 8-hour primary care clinics
title_full A prospective evaluation of emergency patients presenting to 8-hour primary care clinics
title_fullStr A prospective evaluation of emergency patients presenting to 8-hour primary care clinics
title_full_unstemmed A prospective evaluation of emergency patients presenting to 8-hour primary care clinics
title_sort prospective evaluation of emergency patients presenting to 8-hour primary care clinics
publisher Elsevier
series African Journal of Emergency Medicine
issn 2211-419X
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Very little is known about the acuity case mix of patients presenting to eight-hour primary care facilities. Emergency centre triage identifies patients in urgent need of care and speeds up disposition to higher levels of care. Objectives: To describe the acuity of patients presenting to eight-hour facilities, and to determine patient mode of arrival as well as the current triage practice. Methods: A descriptive study of patients arriving at eight-hour primary care clinics in the Western Cape was conducted at four facilities in the Western Cape for a three-month period. The triage nurses collected routine observations from all monthly unscheduled walk-inpatients seen at these facilities. The Triage Early Warning Score was then calculated and the South African Triage Scale acuity level identified and recorded. Results: A total of 1801 patients were included in the study. The total acuity distribution of the four facilities was as follow: emergency (0.3%), very urgent (15.3%), urgent (26.5%) and non-urgent (57.8%). The 2 smaller clinics (De Doorns and Heideveld) saw a higher percentage of emergency/very urgent/urgent versus non-urgent patients (85% versus 15%). Conclusions: This study shows that eight-hour primary care facilities have a large proportion of urgent patients (42%) and would benefit from a standardised emergency centre triage tool for patients. Therefore it is recommended that the South African Triage Scale be implemented at these facilities as soon as possible.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X13001699
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