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Clinical processes in a high resolution clinic of specialist outpatient clinics

Authors

Zambrana-Garcia, J. L. , TORRES JIMÉNEZ, MERCEDES, Rubio-Sanchez, J. M. , Montijano-Cabrera, A. , Pena-Ojeda, J. A. , Velasco-Malagon, M. J.

External publication

No

Means

Rev Calid Asist

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

SJR Impact

0.196

Publication date

01/03/2017

ISI

000407258700004

Scopus Id

2-s2.0-84994101810

Abstract

Objectives: The high resolution clinic (HRC) is an outpatient care process by which treatment and diagnosis are established, recorded, and completed in a single day. The aim of this study was to assess the extent to which patients with medical conditions may benefit from a single consultation system. Material and methods: A descriptive study of 795 first visit events, randomly selected as high resolution consultations in cardiology, gastroenterology, internal medicine, and chest diseases. A discussion is presented on the percentage of patients who benefited from HRC and the complementary tests performed. Results: A total of 559 (70%, 95% CI: 67-73%) of all first visits became HRCs, and 483 (61%, 95% CI: 57%-64%) required a diagnostic test that was reviewed on the same day. There were differences between medical consultations (86% in cardiology versus 44% in gastroenterology consultations, P<.001). Performing a test on the same day significantly increased the percentage of HRCs (49 versus 22%, P<.001). Ischaemic heart disease, dyspepsia, headache, and asthma were the conditions most commonly leading to HRC. The most common tests were cranial tomography, blood analysis, and ultrasound. Conclusions: Medical consultations may largely benefit from an HRC system, only requiring some organisational changes and no additional costs. (C) 2016 SECA. Published by Elsevier Espana, S.L.U. All rights reserved.

Keywords

Ambulatory care; Organisational efficiency; Time management

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