Exploring opportunities to prevent cirrhosis admissions in the emergency department: A multicenter multidisciplinary survey.

Publication/Presentation Date

3-1-2018

Abstract

Patients with cirrhosis have high admission and readmission rates, and it is estimated that a quarter are potentially preventable. Little data are available regarding nonmedical factors impacting triage decisions in this patient population. This study sought to explore such factors as well as to determine provider perspectives on low-acuity clinical presentations to the emergency department, including ascites and hepatic encephalopathy. A survey was distributed in four liver transplant centers to both emergency medicine and hepatology providers, who included attending physicians, house staff, and advanced practitioners; 196 surveys were returned (estimated response rate 50.6%). Emergency medicine providers identified several influential nonmedical factors impacting inpatient triage decisions, including input from a hepatologist (77.7%), inadequate patient access to outpatient specialty care (68.6%), and patient need for diagnostic testing for a procedure (65.6%). When given patient-based scenarios of low-acuity cases, such as ascites requiring paracentesis, only 7.0% believed patients should be hospitalized while 48.9% said these patients would be hospitalized at their institution (

Volume

2

Issue

3

First Page

237

Last Page

244

ISSN

2471-254X

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

29507899

Department(s)

Department of Emergency Medicine

Document Type

Article

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