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A descriptive study of an adult non- trauma emergency centre at a Cape Town central referral hospital

Objective: The study evaluated the demographics and acuity of patients at a South African central referral hospital. The triage acuity, diagnosis and disposition from the Emergency Centre (EC) were assessed, and the impact of COVID19 initial lockdown on presentations as a secondary outcome. Methods:...

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Main Author: Kubeka, Vuyiswa
Other Authors: Hodkinson, Peter
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Public Health and Family Medicine 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kubeka, Vuyiswa
author2 Hodkinson, Peter
author_browse Hodkinson, Peter
Kubeka, Vuyiswa
author_facet Hodkinson, Peter
Kubeka, Vuyiswa
author_sort Kubeka, Vuyiswa
collection Thesis
description Objective: The study evaluated the demographics and acuity of patients at a South African central referral hospital. The triage acuity, diagnosis and disposition from the Emergency Centre (EC) were assessed, and the impact of COVID19 initial lockdown on presentations as a secondary outcome. Methods: Data were collected retrospectively from 1 March 2019 to 31 May 2020, including the first 2-month COVID 19 lockdown period. Data was entered electronically by EC staff for routine healthcare management processes, including final ICD 10 code diagnosis on leaving the EC. Results: A total of 38477 patients were included, 20 excluded, with a mean of 2565 seen per month prior to the COVID lockdown when there were 1619 monthly. Lower acuity patients were largely either referred by a general practitioner or self-referred. Of the discharged patients,64% were lower acuity. Some 57% of specialist referrals were high acuity. The top four disease categories were cardiovascular 15%, gastrointestinal and hepatobiliary 14%, neurology 13 % and respiratory 12%. Disposition for referral to an inpatient specialist was 42%. Patients discharged from the EC amounted to 35%. Total time in the EC for patients referred to an inpatient specialist were a median of 561 minutes and 23 minutes for discharged patients. Conclusion: Central referral hospitals offer specialty and subspecialty services for emergency and outpatient presentations. A good deal of the patient load on the EC was relatively low acuity patients that might be more efficiently seen elsewhere such as subspecialty outpatient clinics to alleviate the burden on the EC, and to free it up for high acuity patients. This study can serve as a foundation for reflection on the use of a specialised central referral hospital EC as a resource in the healthcare system. We observed a global trend of decreased EC presentations during COVID19 lockdown period.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:33.381Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Department of Public Health and Family Medicine
publisherStr Department of Public Health and Family Medicine
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39599 A descriptive study of an adult non- trauma emergency centre at a Cape Town central referral hospital Kubeka, Vuyiswa Hodkinson, Peter Evans Derrick Emergency Medicine Objective: The study evaluated the demographics and acuity of patients at a South African central referral hospital. The triage acuity, diagnosis and disposition from the Emergency Centre (EC) were assessed, and the impact of COVID19 initial lockdown on presentations as a secondary outcome. Methods: Data were collected retrospectively from 1 March 2019 to 31 May 2020, including the first 2-month COVID 19 lockdown period. Data was entered electronically by EC staff for routine healthcare management processes, including final ICD 10 code diagnosis on leaving the EC. Results: A total of 38477 patients were included, 20 excluded, with a mean of 2565 seen per month prior to the COVID lockdown when there were 1619 monthly. Lower acuity patients were largely either referred by a general practitioner or self-referred. Of the discharged patients,64% were lower acuity. Some 57% of specialist referrals were high acuity. The top four disease categories were cardiovascular 15%, gastrointestinal and hepatobiliary 14%, neurology 13 % and respiratory 12%. Disposition for referral to an inpatient specialist was 42%. Patients discharged from the EC amounted to 35%. Total time in the EC for patients referred to an inpatient specialist were a median of 561 minutes and 23 minutes for discharged patients. Conclusion: Central referral hospitals offer specialty and subspecialty services for emergency and outpatient presentations. A good deal of the patient load on the EC was relatively low acuity patients that might be more efficiently seen elsewhere such as subspecialty outpatient clinics to alleviate the burden on the EC, and to free it up for high acuity patients. This study can serve as a foundation for reflection on the use of a specialised central referral hospital EC as a resource in the healthcare system. We observed a global trend of decreased EC presentations during COVID19 lockdown period. 2024-05-13T10:28:46Z 2024-05-13T10:28:46Z 2023 2024-05-13T10:06:37Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39599 eng application/pdf Department of Public Health and Family Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Emergency Medicine
Kubeka, Vuyiswa
A descriptive study of an adult non- trauma emergency centre at a Cape Town central referral hospital
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A descriptive study of an adult non- trauma emergency centre at a Cape Town central referral hospital
title_full A descriptive study of an adult non- trauma emergency centre at a Cape Town central referral hospital
title_fullStr A descriptive study of an adult non- trauma emergency centre at a Cape Town central referral hospital
title_full_unstemmed A descriptive study of an adult non- trauma emergency centre at a Cape Town central referral hospital
title_short A descriptive study of an adult non- trauma emergency centre at a Cape Town central referral hospital
title_sort descriptive study of an adult non trauma emergency centre at a cape town central referral hospital
topic Emergency Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39599
work_keys_str_mv AT kubekavuyiswa adescriptivestudyofanadultnontraumaemergencycentreatacapetowncentralreferralhospital
AT kubekavuyiswa descriptivestudyofanadultnontraumaemergencycentreatacapetowncentralreferralhospital