Patient preference for emergency care: Can and should it be changed?

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Abstract

The authors use a statewide survey to examine care seeking behavior in the emergency department (ED). Most patients who go to the ED (69.3%) do so mainly for conditions they believe are urgent. Time before seeking ED care is highly variable from immediately (28.7%) to more than 1 week (7.0%) and is only weakly related to the perceived urgency of medical condition. Healthier individuals initiate ED care more rapidly than sicker patients. In retrospect, 80.4% of patients would go to the same ED if they had the same medical episode but this percentage falls substantially with increased ED waiting time. Subject to some limitations uncovered in model specification tests, the study highlights several correlates of ED care seeking behavior that may be useful for designing strategies to divert some patients away from the ED. It also raises larger questions, however, about whether diversion is optimal from patient and health system perspectives. © The Author(s) 2012.

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APA

Delia, D., Cantor, J. C., Brownlee, S., Nova, J., & Gaboda, D. (2012, June). Patient preference for emergency care: Can and should it be changed? Medical Care Research and Review. https://doi.org/10.1177/1077558711430689

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