4.3 Article

NO DIVERSION IN WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS

Journal

JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Volume 44, Issue 2, Pages 313-320

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2012.06.017

Keywords

diversion; ambulance; length of stay; volume; throughput

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Background: Massachusetts (MA) instituted a moratorium on ambulance diversion (No Diversion) on January 1, 2009. Study Objectives: Determine whether No Diversion was associated with changes in Emergency Department (ED) throughput measures. Design: Comparison of three 3-month periods. Period 1: 1 year prior (January-March 2008); Period 2: 3 months prior (October-December 2008); Period 3: 3 months after (January-March 2009). Setting: Seven EDs in Western MA; two - including the only Level I Trauma Center - were high diversion (>= 562 h/year) and 5 were low diversion (<= 260 h/year). For all, high diversion and low diversion ED groups, we compared mean monthly throughput measures, including: 1) total volume, 2) number of admissions, 3) number of elopements, 4) length of stay for all, admitted and discharged patients. Mean absolute and percent changes were estimated using mixed-effects regression analysis. Linear mixed models were run for all, high and low diversion EDs comparing means of changes between periods. Results are presented as mean change per month in number and percent, and 95% confidence intervals were calculated. We specified that a clinically significant effect of No Diversion had to meet two criteria: 1) there was a consistent difference in the means for both the Period 1 vs. Period 3 comparison and the Period 2 vs. Period 3 comparison, and 2) both comparisons had to achieve statistical significance at p < 0.01. Results: According to pre-determined criteria, no clinically significant changes were found in any ED group in mean monthly volume, admissions, elopements, or length-of-stay for any patient disposition group. Conclusion: No Diversion was not associated with significant changes in throughput measures in all, high diversion and low diversion EDs. (c) 2013 Elsevier Inc.

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