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What are the Top Causes of Avoiding Emergency Room Visits

by Bidita Debnath on Sep 5 2017 11:59 PM

Nearly 3.3% of all emergency department visits are avoidable and using alternative medical facilities also reduces health care costs significantly.

 What are the Top Causes of Avoiding Emergency Room Visits
Timing is crucial in the case of any emergency and getting the right care, and getting it fast, should be the focus, but a recent study found that 3.3% of all emergency department visits were avoidable.
Of these, the top 3 discharge diagnoses were alcohol abuse, dental disorders, and depressive disorders. The study suggests that avoidable emergency department visits could be reduced by increasing access to dental and mental health facilities. The study got published in the International Journal for Quality in Health Care.

The study analysed data representing 424 million visits made to emergency departments in the United States by patients aged 18 to 64 between 2005 and 2011. It defines 'avoidable' as those cases where no diagnostic or screening services, procedures, or medications were performed or given for patients that were discharged home. It found that 6.8% of all avoidable visits were caused by alcohol-related or mood disorders and 3.9% of all avoidable visits related to dental disorders. It also notes that 14% of avoidable visits were made by ambulance.

Emergency departments are designed to treat patients in immediate physical danger, conditions that threaten life and limb. Definitively treating for conditions arising from mental health or dental problems require specialist care beyond that of the emergency department. The study notes that 16.9% of all mood disorder related visits, 10.4% of all alcohol related visits, and 4.9% of all dental-related visits were avoidable.

Despite these significant percentages, the vast majority of diagnoses in these areas were not deemed avoidable so it should not be assumed that all patients with these conditions should not attend the emergency department. However, these findings suggest that policy initiatives could alleviate pressure on emergency departments by addressing gaps in dental and mental health care in the United States, which could provide treatment to this group of emergency department visitors at a lower cost elsewhere.

Dr. Renee Hsia, lead author of the study, states, "We chose to use a particularly conservative definition of "avoidable" to quantify the proportion of visits that did not require labs, x-rays, procedures, or medications. These diagnosis codes certainly should not be used prospectively to define which conditions are non-emergent; the main take-away is actually that the percentage of these potentially avoidable conditions that come to the ED is very small. Efforts to contain healthcare costs by focusing on decreasing potentially avoidable ED use may be fairly low-yield."

Source-Eurekalert


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