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1.
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore ; : 568-572, 2008.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-358774

ABSTRACT

<p><b>INTRODUCTION</b>The study was designed to reduce door-to-balloon times in primary percutaneous coronary intervention for patients presenting to the Emergency Department with acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction, using an audit as a quality initiative.</p><p><b>MATERIALS AND METHODS</b>A multidisciplinary work group performed a pilot study over 3 months, then implemented various process and work-flow strategies to improve overall door-to-balloon times.</p><p><b>RESULTS AND CONCLUSION</b>We developed a guideline-based, institution-specific written protocol for triaging and managing patients who present to the Emergency Department with symptoms suggestive of STEMI, resulting in shortened median door-to-balloon times from 130.5 to 109.5 minutes (P<0.001).</p>


Subject(s)
Humans , Angioplasty, Balloon, Coronary , Emergency Service, Hospital , Health Care Surveys , Medical Audit , Myocardial Infarction , Therapeutics , Pilot Projects , Program Development , Quality Indicators, Health Care , Quality of Health Care , Singapore , Time Factors , Triage
2.
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore ; : 103-108, 2008.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-348317

ABSTRACT

<p><b>INTRODUCTION</b>Increasing demand for public healthcare and access to specialist care has become a major concern. Characterising the referral pattern to a national centre's cardiology specialist outpatient clinics (SOCs) and the diagnostic outcomes may be useful in formulating referral guidelines to contain rising demand.</p><p><b>MATERIALS AND METHODS</b>A prospective observational followup study was conducted of all consecutive new patient referrals to the cardiology SOCs of the National Heart Centre over a 1-month period. The records of these 1224 patients were reviewed following their first visit and again after 3 months of evaluation and investigation. Patients' demographics, referral sources, indications of referral, risk factors, provisional and final diagnoses were collected. Referrals from the top 2 volume sources (government polyclinics and hospital Emergency Department) accounted for 600 referrals. These subsidised referrals formed the study group for analysis.</p><p><b>RESULTS</b>The mean age of referred patients was 56 +/- 15.2 years, with equal proportion of males and females. Most patients had known cardiac risk factors of hypertension (53.2%) and hyperlipidaemia (42.3%). Only 23% of referrals had significant cardiac abnormalities. Referrals for typical chest pain derived the highest yield whereas referrals for atypical chest pain, non-cardiac chest pain derived the lowest yield. Referrals for asymptomatic electrocardiogram (ECG) changes (except for atrial flutter/fibrillation) did not yield cardiac abnormalities. Multivariate analysis of chest pain referrals showed typical chest pain and hyperlipidaemia to be statistically significant predictors for coronary artery disease.</p><p><b>CONCLUSION</b>Referrals to cardiology outpatient specialist clinics should be based on the presence of patient symptoms, particularly that of typical chest pain. In asymptomatic patients, routine ECG screening did not appear to yield significant cardiac abnormalities.</p>


Subject(s)
Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Ambulatory Care Facilities , Cardiology , Cardiovascular Diseases , Diagnosis , Health Services Needs and Demand , Medicine , Prospective Studies , Referral and Consultation , Economics , Singapore , Specialization
3.
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore ; : 151-157, 2008.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-348308

ABSTRACT

Ensuring timely access to specialist care is an important indicator of the quality of a health service. Demand for cardiology outpatient appointments has grown considerably in the last decade, leading to increased waiting time for cardiology appointments at public hospitals. This paper examines the effectiveness of past and ongoing strategies initiated by the National Heart Centre, many of which were in collaboration with SingHealth Polyclinics, documents the lessons learnt, and provides a framework for approaching this problem. Instead of a simplistic approach where institutions react to long waiting times by growing capacity to meet demand, this paper emphasises the need to focus on the final intended outcome (timely diagnosis and treatment) rather than on a single performance indicator, such as waiting time. A broad systems approach at the national level is advocated, rather than piecemeal, uncoordinated actions by individual hospitals.


Subject(s)
Humans , Ambulatory Care Facilities , Cardiology , Cardiovascular Diseases , Therapeutics , Cooperative Behavior , Efficiency, Organizational , Health Services Accessibility , Health Services Needs and Demand , Primary Health Care , Referral and Consultation , Singapore
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