A significant proportion of acute hospital admissions are avoidable, and hospitals across the country have introduced a range of innovative initiatives to avoid unnecessary admissions.

TOP INSIGHT
The likelihood of a decision being made to admit a patient to hospital was not determined solely by the medical diagnosis and perceived risk.
The research was funded by the NIHR Health Services and Delivery programme and supported by the NIHR Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care South West Peninsula (PenCLAHRC).
The study found that the likelihood of a decision being made to admit a patient to hospital was not determined solely by the medical diagnosis and perceived risk: it was also influenced by the seniority and experience of the clinical staff making the decisions, the patient's social circumstances, access to certain investigations, the proximity of the four-hour target and the availability of time to arrange alternatives to hospital admission where these existed.
However, the approaches taken to reducing unnecessary admissions varied considerably across the four hospitals, and it was evident that the various innovations had been developed to respond to local need. Some of the main innovations included a hospital based acute GP service, ambulatory care units, a range of discharge assessment procedures and teams for elderly patients, the availability of rapid access outpatient clinics, the use of observation areas where patients were not subject to the four hour target - allowing more time to gather vital medical and social information, observe, investigate and make arrangements that could avoid hospital admission.
Early patient assessment by senior staff always played a central role in reducing admissions in all four hospitals, but their expertise was deployed in different ways, including in a purely advisory "controller" capacity supporting trainees and other frontline staff.
The study was led by Professor Jonathan Pinkney and Professor Richard Byng from Plymouth University Peninsula Schools of Medicine and Dentistry. Professor Pinkney said: "Hospitals and their staff are under immense pressure to ensure that each and every patient receives the best and most appropriate treatment. The emergency department is a particular pressure point and we were impressed by how each of the four hospitals in the study addressed the issue of avoiding admitting patients to the ward where it was unnecessary. While there were common themes in how the hospitals approached this issue, the systems and innovations they put in place were informed by local knowledge and need."
According to Professor Pinkney this study, capturing the experiences of patients and staff and informs the ongoing debate about how to reduce avoidable admissions. The information can assist policy makers with the evidence they need in order to advise on innovations that can improve NHS performance and most importantly patient experience.
Source-Eurekalert
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