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Impact of early assessment and intervention by teams involving health and social care professionals in the emergency department: A systematic review

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posted on 2022-08-25, 13:55 authored by Marica Cassarino, Katie RobinsonKatie Robinson, Rosie Quinn, Breda Naddy, Andrew O'ReganAndrew O'Regan, Damien RyanDamien Ryan, Fiona Boland, Marie E. Ward, Rosa McNamara, MARGARET O'CONNOR, Gerard McCarthy, Rose GalvinRose Galvin
Dedicated Health and Social Care Professional (HSCP) teams have been proposed for emergency departments (EDs) in an effort to improve patient and process outcomes. This systematic review synthesises the totality of evidence relating to the impact of early assessment and intervention by HSCP teams on quality, safety and effectiveness of care in the ED.Methods A systematic literature search was conducted in April 2019 to identify experimental studies examining the effectiveness of ED-based HSCP teams providing services to adults aged 18 years old and including two or more of the following disciplines: occupational therapist, physiotherapist, medical social worker, clinical pharmacist, or speech and language therapist. Data extraction and quality appraisal of each study were conducted independently by two reviewers.ResultsSix studies were included in the review (n = 273,886), all describing interdisciplinary Care Coordination Teams (CCTs) caring for adults aged 65 years old. CCT care was associated with on average 2% reduced rates of hospital admissions (three studies), improve referrals to community services for falls (one study), increased satisfaction (two studies) with the safety of discharge (patients and staff), and with the distribution of workload (staff), improved health-related quality of care (one study). No statistically significant differences between intervention and control groups emerged in terms of rates of ED re-visits, ranging between 0.2% and 3% (two studies); hospital length of stay (one hour difference noted in one study) or mortality rates (0.5% difference in one study). Increased rates of unplanned hospitalisations following the intervention (13.9% difference) were reported in one study. The methodological quality of the studies was mixed.

Funding

Development of a structure identification methodology for nonlinear dynamic systems

National Research Foundation

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Publication

PLoS ONE;

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

HRB, RCQPS

Language

English

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