Jurnal Internasional Aprika vol.12 issue 3 2022
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Emergency clinician output in a district hospital emergency centre: a cross-sectional analysis
Dublin Core
Title
Jurnal Internasional Aprika vol.12 issue 3 2022
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Emergency clinician output in a district hospital emergency centre: a cross-sectional analysis
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Emergency clinician output in a district hospital emergency centre: a cross-sectional analysis
Subject
Emergency medicine Low- to middle-income country Crowding Patient flow Output
Description
Introduction: Appropriate and efficient staffing is a cornerstone of emergency centre performance. There is how- ever a paucity of literature describing clinician output in low- and middle-income countries with current staffing models based on anecdotal evidence. This study aimed to assess clinician output at a district level emergency centre, and how it varied depending on shift, clinician, and workload factors. Methods: We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study using an existing electronic patient registry, to determine the patients consulted per hour (PPH) during each clinician shift and how this is affected by various clinician, shift, and workload factors. Data was collected over three non-contiguous randomly selected four-week cycles from Mitchells Plain Hospital’s electronic patient registry. Associations between PPH and various factors were assessed using ANOVA with post-hoc adjustments where appropriate. The correlation between PPH and workload metrics was calculated with the Pearson’s Rank correlation test. Statistical significance was defined as p < 0.05. Results: A total of 1 289 clinician shifts were analysed with an overall PPH of 0.7. A significant association between PPH and shift type (p = 0.021), clinician category (p < 0.001) and cumulative shifts (p < 0.001) were shown. There was a decline in clinician output during a shift and output was significantly decreased by the number of boarders in the emergency centre but increased with higher numbers of patients waiting at the start of the shift. Conclusion: This study describes a relatively low clinician output as compared to evidence from high-income countries and has highlighted several associations with various shift, clinician, and workload factors. The results from this study will form the basis of quality improvement interventions to improve patient throughput and will inform staffscheduling and surge planning strategies
Creator
Mary Elizabeth Hoffe , Michael McCaul , Clint Hendrikse
Source
www.elsevier.com/locate/afjem
Date
26 May 2022
Contributor
PERI IRAWAN
Format
PDF
Language
ENGLISH
Type
TEXT
Files
Citation
Mary Elizabeth Hoffe , Michael McCaul , Clint Hendrikse , “Jurnal Internasional Aprika vol.12 issue 3 2022
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Emergency clinician output in a district hospital emergency centre: a cross-sectional analysis,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed March 12, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2027.
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Emergency clinician output in a district hospital emergency centre: a cross-sectional analysis,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed March 12, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2027.