Implementing a virtual emergency department to avoid unnecessary emergency department presentations

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Kelly, Jaimon T
Mitchell, Nicole
Campbell, Katrina L
Furlong, Karen
Langley, Matthew
Clark, Sean
Rushbrook, Elizabeth
Hansen, Kim
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2023
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Abstract

Objective EDs are necessary for urgent health concerns; however, many physical ED visits could be better treated in alternate settings. The present study aimed to describe the feasibility, acceptability and effectiveness of a Virtual ED to reduce unnecessary physical ED presentations at a large tertiary health service in Australia.

Methods This observational study using the RE-AIM framework (Reach, Efficacy, Adoption, Implementation and Maintenance) evaluated the feasibility of a Virtual ED using routinely collected health service data and process-evaluation to assess intervention fidelity and adherence between April 2020 and 31 March 2022. The primary outcome for the present study was the feasibility of the Virtual ED model of care.

Results The Virtual ED received 2080 direct calls for patients with a mean age of 50.3 years, with 70.4% managed in the Virtual ED alone and 29.6% referred for physical ED presentation. Of the 2080 direct referrals, 95.8% were potentially avoidable ED presentations. Of those referred, 28.3% required an admission. Of calls managed entirely by Virtual ED, 18 (1.2%) unexpectedly required a hospital admission within 48 h. General practitioner respondents rated the Virtual ED service as helpful to very helpful. The service had an average of 212 referrals per month, with a 65.2% average growth rate. The Virtual ED service was considered helpful and clinically appropriate, with a high level of ED avoidance.

Conclusion The Virtual ED prevented 70% of community triaged patients from presenting to the physical ED, with good uptake from all referrers, supporting the use of virtual care pathways in emergency care management.

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Emergency Medicine Australasia

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© 2023 The Authors. Emergency Medicine Australasia published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australasian College for Emergency Medicine. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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This publication has been entered in Griffith Research Online as an advanced online version.

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Subject

Clinical sciences

digital health

emergency department

emergency medicine

telehealth

virtual health

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Kelly, JT; Mitchell, N; Campbell, KL; Furlong, K; Langley, M; Clark, S; Rushbrook, E; Hansen, K, Implementing a virtual emergency department to avoid unnecessary emergency department presentations, Emergency Medicine Australasia, 2023

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