Changes in medical care due to the absence of internal medicine physicians in emergency departments.
- Author:
Kyoung Ho KIM
1
;
Jang Young LEE
;
Won Suk LEE
;
Won Young SUNG
;
Sang Won SEO
Author Information
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords: Emergency service, hospital; Emergency medicine; Internal medicine; Length of stay; Hospitalization
- MeSH: Academic Medical Centers; Cardiology; Diagnosis; Emergencies*; Emergency Medicine; Emergency Service, Hospital*; Hospitalization; Humans; Internal Medicine*; Length of Stay; Pulmonary Medicine
- From: Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine 2018;5(2):120-130
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
- Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Especially in emergency departments (EDs), a lack of internal medicine (IM) residents in charge causes difficulties in medical care and ED overcrowding. Thus, protocols without IM residents in EDs is needed. This study aimed to investigate changes in medical care when emergency medicine residents replaced the roles of IM residents. METHODS: This study was conducted at a single-site ED of a university medical center. The study group contained patients admitted to the IM department between September and December 2015, during which IM residents were absent in the ED. The control group contained patients admitted to the IM department between September and December 2014, during which IM residents were present in the ED. Changes in medical care between the presence and absence of IM residents in the ED were studied by comparing admission rates from the ED, length of ED stay, duration of hospitalization, and concordance of diagnoses between admission and discharge by the IM department. RESULTS: The study group contained 2,341 patients; the control group contained 2,215 patients. Admission rates from the ED increased by 53.4% (95% confidence interval [CI], P < 0.001); lengths of stay decreased by 15.1% (95% CI, P < 0.001); and durations of hospitalization in the pulmonology department decreased by 38.4% (95% CI, P=0.001). Concordance of diagnoses between admission and discharge decreased by 14.2% in the cardiology department (95% CI, P=0.021). CONCLUSION: Lengths of stay were reduced without critical declines in diagnostic concordance rates when emergency medicine physicians, instead of IM residents in the ED, decided upon admissions of IM patients.