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Wiley InterScience

Emergency Medicine Australasia

Emergency Medicine Australasia

Volume 17 Issue 5-6, Pages 472 - 479

Published Online: 1 Nov 2005

Journal compilation © 2010 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine and Australasian Society for Emergency Medicine


Official Journal of the Australasian College for Emergency Medicine and the Australasian Society for Emergency Medicine
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Review Article
Primary care patients in the emergency department: Who are they? A review of the definition of the 'primary care patient' in the emergency department
Andrew J Bezzina 1,2 , Peter B Smith 1,2 , David Cromwell 2,3 and Kathy Eagar 2
  1 Illawarra Area Health, South Coast Mail Centre ,   2 Centre for Health Service Development, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia ; and   3 Clinical Effectiveness Unit, The Royal College of Surgeons of England and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
Correspondence to  Dr Andrew Bezzina, Emergency Department, Wollongong Hospital, PO Box 8808, South Coast Mail Centre, NSW 2501, Australia. Email: bezzinaa@iahs.nsw.gov.au

 Andrew J Bezzina, MB BS, DipRACOG, FACEM, Senior Staff Specialist; Peter B Smith, MB BS, FACEM, MSpMed, Senior Staff Specialist; David Cromwell, PhD, Lecturer; Kathy Eagar, PhD, Professor, Director.

Copyright 2005 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
emergency department • inappropriate patient • primary care

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionMethodsResultsDiscussionReferences

Objective: To review the definition of 'primary care' and 'inappropriate' patients in ED and develop a generally acceptable working definition of a 'primary care' presentation in ED.

Method: A Medline review of articles on primary care in ED and the definitions used.

Results: A total of 34 reviewed papers contained a proposed definition or comment on the definition for potential 'primary care', 'general practice', or 'inappropriate' patients in ED. A representative definition was developed premised on the common factors in these papers:

  •   Low urgency/acuity – triage categories four or five in the Australasian Triage Scale

  •   Self-referred – by definition, patients referred by general practitioner/community primary medical services are not primary care cases because a primary care service has referred them on

  •   Presenting for a new episode of care (i.e. not a planned return because planned returns are not self-referred)

  •   Unlikely to be admitted (in the opinion of Emergency Nurse interviewers) or ultimately not admitted

Discussion: This definition can be applied either prospectively or retrospectively, depending on the purpose. Appropriateness must be considered in light of a legitimate role for ED in primary care and the balance of resources between primary care and emergency medicine in local settings.


Accepted 24 June 2005

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1742-6723.2005.00779.x About DOI

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