• Ann Emerg Med · Sep 2003

    The left-without-being-seen patients: what would keep them from leaving?

    • Katherine W Arendt, Annie T Sadosty, Amy L Weaver, Christopher R Brent, and Eric T Boie.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Mayo Graduate School of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55902, USA. Arendt.katherine@mayo.edu
    • Ann Emerg Med. 2003 Sep 1; 42 (3): 317-23.

    Study ObjectiveWe determine which services, if any, an emergency department (ED) could provide to help a patient who left the ED without being seen by a physician wait longer to see a physician.MethodsIn this retrospective observational study, patients who had left the Saint Marys Hospital ED without being seen by a physician were surveyed by telephone. The Saint Marys Hospital ED is a 43-bed facility with an annual patient volume of 77600 located in a city of 82000. Responders were questioned regarding 15 specific services the Saint Marys Hospital ED could provide to help them wait longer. Eligible participants included willing adults, parents accompanying patients younger than 18 years of age, and patients between the ages of 13 and 18 years whose parents granted permission. Participants were excluded if they denied research authorization, did not speak English, refused to participate, or were unable to be contacted.ResultsBetween April 9, 2001, and July 17, 2001, 20494 patients registered, 172 patients left without being seen, and 152 patients approved research authorization; we attempted to contact these patients. In total, 97 patients, their parents, or their caretakers completed the entire interview (56.4% of those who left without being seen, 63.8% of those with whom contact was attempted). Nearly 85% of responders retrospectively identified "more frequent updates on wait time" and 70.1% identified "the availability of immediate temporary treatments" as services that would have helped them wait longer. Other waiting room services were identified by fewer than half of the responders as potentially helpful in allowing them to wait longer.ConclusionCommunication of estimated waiting time and the availability of immediate treatments for minor injuries or symptoms might increase the time patients are willing to wait and therefore might decrease an ED's rate of patients leaving without being seen.

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