Improving Emergency Department Flow: Reducing Turnaround Time for Emergent CT Scans

Emergency departments across the U.S. are more congested than ever, and there is a pressing need to create capacity by improving patient flow. The long turnaround time of imaging tests, such as computed tomography (CT) scans, are a major reason for delays in treatment and disposition. Over an eight-...

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Veröffentlicht in:AMIA ... Annual Symposium proceedings 2018, Vol.2018, p.897-906
Hauptverfasser: Perotte, Rimma, Lewin, Greg O, Tambe, Ujwala, Galorenzo, Jamie B, Vawdrey, David K, Akala, Olabiyi O, Makkar, Jasnit S, Lin, Dana J, Mainieri, Lisa, Chang, Betty C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Emergency departments across the U.S. are more congested than ever, and there is a pressing need to create capacity by improving patient flow. The long turnaround time of imaging tests, such as computed tomography (CT) scans, are a major reason for delays in treatment and disposition. Over an eight-month pre-intervention period during which 10,063 CT scans were ordered in our emergency department, the average time from a CT order to the availability of the radiologist's final report was 5.9 hours (median=4.2 hours). We created a multi-disciplinary team of physicians, nurses, technicians, transporters, informaticians, and engineers to identify barriers and implement technical as well as human-factors solutions. In the corresponding eight-month period after the implementation of the intervention bundle, there was a 1.2 hour reduction in CT turnaround time, despite a 13.8% increase in the number of CT scans ordered (p
ISSN:1559-4076