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Journal ArticleDOI

Effectiveness of Interventions to Decrease Emergency Department Visits by Adult Frequent Users: A Systematic Review.

TLDR
Interventions targeting frequent ED users appear to decrease ED visits and may improve stable housing and future research should examine cost-effectiveness and adopt standardized definitions.
Abstract
Objectives Frequent emergency department (ED) users are high-risk and high-resource-utilizing patients. This systematic review evaluates effectiveness of interventions targeting adult frequent ED users in reducing visit frequency and improving patient outcomes. Methods An a priori protocol was published in PROSPERO. Two independent reviewers screened, selected, rated quality, and extracted data. Third-party adjudication resolved disagreements. Rate ratios of post- versus pre-intervention ED visits were calculated. Data sources were from a comprehensive search that included seven databases and the gray literature. Eligibility criteria for selecting studies included experimental studies assessing the effect of interventions on frequent users’ ED visits and patient-oriented outcomes. Results A total of 6,865 citations were identified and 31 studies included. Designs were noncontrolled (n = 21) and controlled (n = 4) before–after studies and randomized controlled trials (n = 6). Frequent user definitions varied considerably and risk of bias was moderate to high. Studies examined general frequent users or those with psychiatric comorbidities, chronic disease, or low socioeconomic status or the elderly. Interventions included case management (n = 18), care plans (n = 8), diversion strategies (n = 3), printout case notes (n = 1), and social work visits (n = 1). Post- versus pre-intervention rate ratios were calculated for 25 studies and indicated a significant visit decrease in 21 (84%) of these studies. The median rate ratio was 0.63 (interquartile range = 0.41 to 0.71), indicating that the general effect of the interventions described was to decrease ED visits post-intervention. Significant visit decreases were found for a majority of studies in subgroup analyses based on 6- or 12-month follow-up, definition thresholds, clinical frequent user subgroups, and intervention types. Studies reporting homelessness found consistent improvements in stable housing. Overall, interstudy heterogeneity was high. Conclusions Interventions targeting frequent ED users appear to decrease ED visits and may improve stable housing. Future research should examine cost-effectiveness and adopt standardized definitions.

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Citations
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Effectiveness of interventions targeting frequent users of emergency departments: a systematic review

TL;DR: It appears to be beneficial to patients and justifiable for hospitals to implement case management for frequent users in the framework of a clear and consensual definition of frequent users and standardized outcome measures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trends in Emergency Department Use by Rural and Urban Populations in the United States

TL;DR: Rural EDs experienced greater growth in ED use simultaneous with increased pressure as safety-net hospitals, with a larger proportion of rural EDs categorized assafety-net EDs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Material Needs of Emergency Department Patients: A Systematic Review.

TL;DR: The plurality of prior research confirms that the ED serves a vulnerable population with high rates of material needs, and future research is needed to better understand the role these needs play for ED patients and how to best address them.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characteristics of Case Management in Primary Care Associated With Positive Outcomes for Frequent Users of Health Care: A Systematic Review.

TL;DR: Policy makers and clinicians should focus on their case-finding processes because this is the essential characteristic of CM effectiveness and value should be placed on high-intensity CM interventions and developing care plans with multiple types of care providers to help improve patient outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Case Management Reduces Length of Stay, Charges, and Testing in Emergency Department Frequent Users.

TL;DR: Case management for frequent users of the ED is an effective method to reduce patient visits, the use of diagnostic testing, length of stay, and cost within the authors' institution.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The hazards of scoring the quality of clinical trials for meta-analysis.

TL;DR: The data indicate that the use of summary scores to identify trials of high quality is problematic, and relevant methodological aspects should be assessed individually and their influence on effect sizes explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

Frequent Users of Emergency Departments: The Myths, the Data, and the Policy Implications

TL;DR: Frequent ED users are a heterogeneous group along many dimensions and defy popular assumptions, and many frequent users present with true medical needs, which may explain why existing attempts to address the phenomena have had mixed success at best.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characteristics of Frequent Users of Emergency Departments

TL;DR: The majority of adults who use the ED frequently have insurance and a usual source of care but are more likely than less frequent users to be in poor health and require medical attention, and additional support systems and better access to alternative sites of care may help to reduce ED use.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predictors and Outcomes of Frequent Emergency Department Users

TL;DR: Frequent ED visits are associated with socioeconomic distress, chronic illness, and high use of other health resources, and efforts to reduce ED visits require addressing the unique needs of these patients in the emergency and primary care settings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characteristics of occasional and frequent emergency department users: do insurance coverage and access to care matter?

TL;DR: Frequent ED users do not appear to use the ED as a substitute for their primary care but, in fact, are a less healthy population who need and use more care overall.
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