Areas of delay related to prolonged length of stay in an emergency department of an academic hospital in South Africa

Introduction: Globally, length of stay of patients in emergency departments remains a challenge. Remaining in the emergency department for >12 h increases health care costs, morbidity and mortality rates and leads to crowding and lower patient satisfaction.The aim of this research was to describe...

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Main Authors: Kapari Mashao, Tanya Heyns, Zelda White
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-06-01
Series:African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X21000124
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spelling doaj-1d4479e9988b43439385f0c61438004f2021-05-26T04:26:03ZengElsevierAfrican Journal of Emergency Medicine2211-419X2021-06-01112237241Areas of delay related to prolonged length of stay in an emergency department of an academic hospital in South AfricaKapari Mashao0Tanya Heyns1Zelda White2University of Pretoria, Department of Nursing Science, Pretoria, South AfricaUniversity of Pretoria, Department of Nursing Science, Pretoria, South Africa; Corresponding author.University of Pretoria, Department of Human Nutrition, Pretoria, South AfricaIntroduction: Globally, length of stay of patients in emergency departments remains a challenge. Remaining in the emergency department for >12 h increases health care costs, morbidity and mortality rates and leads to crowding and lower patient satisfaction.The aim of this research was to describe the areas of delay related to prolonged length of stay in the emergency department of an academic hospital. Methods: A quantitative retrospective study was done. The Input-Throughput-Output model was used to identify the areas of patients' journey through the emergency department. The possible areas of delay where then described. Using systematic sampling, a total of 100 patient files managed in an emergency department of an academic hospital in South Africa were audited over a period of 3 months. Descriptive statistics and regression analysis was used to analyse data. Results: The mean length of stay of patients in the emergency department was 73 h 49 min. The length of stay per phase was: input (3 h 17 min), throughput (16 h 25 min) and output (54 h 7 min). A strong significant relationship found between the length of stay and the time taken between disposition decision (throughput phase) disposition decision to admission or discharge of patients from the ED (output phase) (p < 0.05). Conclusion: The output phase was identified as the longest area of delay in this study, with the time taken between disposition decision to admission or discharge of patients from the ED (patients waiting for inpatient beds) as the main significant area of delay.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X21000124Emergency departmentInput-Throughput-Output modelLength of stay
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kapari Mashao
Tanya Heyns
Zelda White
spellingShingle Kapari Mashao
Tanya Heyns
Zelda White
Areas of delay related to prolonged length of stay in an emergency department of an academic hospital in South Africa
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Emergency department
Input-Throughput-Output model
Length of stay
author_facet Kapari Mashao
Tanya Heyns
Zelda White
author_sort Kapari Mashao
title Areas of delay related to prolonged length of stay in an emergency department of an academic hospital in South Africa
title_short Areas of delay related to prolonged length of stay in an emergency department of an academic hospital in South Africa
title_full Areas of delay related to prolonged length of stay in an emergency department of an academic hospital in South Africa
title_fullStr Areas of delay related to prolonged length of stay in an emergency department of an academic hospital in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Areas of delay related to prolonged length of stay in an emergency department of an academic hospital in South Africa
title_sort areas of delay related to prolonged length of stay in an emergency department of an academic hospital in south africa
publisher Elsevier
series African Journal of Emergency Medicine
issn 2211-419X
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Introduction: Globally, length of stay of patients in emergency departments remains a challenge. Remaining in the emergency department for >12 h increases health care costs, morbidity and mortality rates and leads to crowding and lower patient satisfaction.The aim of this research was to describe the areas of delay related to prolonged length of stay in the emergency department of an academic hospital. Methods: A quantitative retrospective study was done. The Input-Throughput-Output model was used to identify the areas of patients' journey through the emergency department. The possible areas of delay where then described. Using systematic sampling, a total of 100 patient files managed in an emergency department of an academic hospital in South Africa were audited over a period of 3 months. Descriptive statistics and regression analysis was used to analyse data. Results: The mean length of stay of patients in the emergency department was 73 h 49 min. The length of stay per phase was: input (3 h 17 min), throughput (16 h 25 min) and output (54 h 7 min). A strong significant relationship found between the length of stay and the time taken between disposition decision (throughput phase) disposition decision to admission or discharge of patients from the ED (output phase) (p < 0.05). Conclusion: The output phase was identified as the longest area of delay in this study, with the time taken between disposition decision to admission or discharge of patients from the ED (patients waiting for inpatient beds) as the main significant area of delay.
topic Emergency department
Input-Throughput-Output model
Length of stay
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X21000124
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AT zeldawhite areasofdelayrelatedtoprolongedlengthofstayinanemergencydepartmentofanacademichospitalinsouthafrica
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