6 Recent Studies on Emergency Department Visits

Here are six studies on emergency department visits from the past month, beginning with the most recent.

1. There are gaps in pediatric emergency departments' pandemic preparedness, according to a study in Academic Emergency Medicine.

2. Peer pressure in an emergency department increased the rate of discharge and decreased length of stay, according to a study in The American Journal of Emergency Medicine.

3. Free clinics may help reduce unnecessary emergency department visits, according to a study published in the Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved and reported by Penn State Live.

4. Changes in scheduling reduced the average wait time for a new pediatric endocrinology appointment by approximately 85 percent — from 11.4 weeks to 1.7 weeks — in little over a year, according to a study in Pediatrics.

5. Length of stay at nine Boston-area hospitals' emergency departments did not increase after ambulance diversion was banned in 2009, according to a study in Annals of Emergency Medicine.

6. The National Institutes of Health announced research indicating that coordinated care can prevent unnecessary emergency department visits by adults with disabilities.

More Articles on Capacity Management:

5 Findings on Pediatric EDs' Response to 2009 Flu Pandemic
TeleTracking: Recording Milestones During Care Improves Patient Throughput

Hospital Leaders Should Prioritize ED Crowding Interventions, Physician Says

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