CLINICIAN'S CAPSULE
What is known about the topic?
Medical call centres are commonly used, but the effectiveness of their referrals is often questioned by emergency department (ED) staff.
What did this study ask?
Are referrals from Saskatchewan's medical call centre (HealthLine) appropriate, and do they overburden the local EDs?
What did this study find?
The majority of callers to HealthLine were not referred to EDs, and approximately half of those referred registered in local EDs.
Why does this study matter to clinicians?
Given the inherent challenges of telephone triage, HealthLine does a reasonable job of referrals and does not overburden EDs.
INTRODUCTION
It has been estimated that 50% of after-hours health concerns could be handled over the telephone.Reference Dale, Crouch and Lloyd1,Reference Christensen and Olesen2 Telephone call centres staffed by trained healthcare providers using computer-based support systems have been established to address this issue. Telephone consultations have shown usefulness in providing appropriate emergency department (ED) referrals for poisonings,Reference Jackson, McCain and Nichols3 pediatric patients,Reference Stewart, Fairhurst, Markland and Marzouk4,Reference Kempe, Dempsey and Whitefield5 and adult patients.Reference Tariq, Li and Byrne6–Reference Barber, King, Monroe and Nichols8 However, telephone referrals have been criticized by receiving physiciansReference Al-Abdullah, Plint and Shaw9 and almost half of urgent referrals being identified as non-urgent by ED triage.Reference Scarfone, Luberti and Mistry10
In Saskatchewan, the telephone health consultation line is called HealthLine. Saskatchewan residents who have a health concern can call 811 and be directed to the appropriate personnel to render healthcare advice.
The purpose of this study was to gain insight into HealthLine patients who were referred to EDs in Saskatoon and the effectiveness of HealthLine in triaging patients based on the investigations, treatment, and disposition of the ED visit.
METHODS
This study is a health records review on patients referred by HealthLine to any of the three Saskatoon academic EDs between January 1 and March 31, 2014. In the city of Saskatoon, with a population of 254,569 in 2014, the three EDs had a combined annual census of over 110,000 patient visits. Ethics approval was obtained from the University of Saskatchewan Research Ethics Board. Patients were eligible for inclusion if they called HealthLine during the study period and were subsequently directed to present to an ED. The research team had no measure of the conversation between the patient and HealthLine operator – only the disposition. The referred patients were excluded if they were unable to be identified by a personal health number, instructed to hang up and call 911 immediately, or if they registered in the ED after 48 hours. Other patients arriving by ambulance were not excluded. The 48-hour time limit was to increase the likelihood that the presenting complaint to the ED and the Healthline concern were the same.
A list of personal health numbers was obtained of patients who called HealthLine during the study period and were referred to a Saskatoon ED. This list was then cross-referenced with the Saskatoon Health Region ED registration list from the same time period, limiting the time of registration to within 48 hours of the initial call. These charts were subsequently accessed from health records. Each chart was reviewed to find the corresponding ED visit based on the HealthLine referral date. Patient characteristics (age, gender), ED Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS) score, and a binary “yes” or “no” answer as to whether investigations, treatments, and/or admission took place were entered into an encrypted, password-protected spreadsheet. Investigation was defined as any test ordered by the emergency physician, including diagnostic imaging, laboratory tests, or electrocardiogram. Treatment in the ED was defined as any therapeutic intervention provided to the patient, including administration of medication (oral or intravenous), intravenous fluids, and/or any bedside intervention performed by the ED physician. Physical examination and/or vital signs were not included as investigations or treatment. Admission was defined by whether the patient was subsequently admitted to the hospital under a consulting service.
RESULTS
From January 1, 2014, to March 31, 2014, HealthLine received 5,708 calls, resulting in 7,656 registered patients, as one call can register multiple patients. Based on the initial client navigator assessment, 3,938 of the calls went to a triage nurse. The remainder received health education or service referrals. Of those 3,938 triaged calls, 707 (17.9%) HealthLine patients were referred to EDs in Saskatoon.
Of the 707 callers, 106 had no available ED identifying information (personal health numbers) and were therefore excluded from further study, leaving 601 potential patients. Because 243 did not register within the 48-hour timeline, they were also excluded. Of those callers whose personal health number could be found, the number of patients attending the ED as instructed was 358. Of these 358 patients, 82 either left against medical advice or left without being seen (LWBS) in the ED or had incomplete charts and were therefore excluded from further analysis. The remaining 276 patients had hospital charts pulled for full data extraction and analysis (Table 1).
*One patient gender not recorded; †Saskatoon City Hospital closes its doors at 02030 hours; and ‡One CTAS score not recorded.
During the study period, there were 29,529 total patient visits to the three EDs. The total patients referred from HealthLine equated to 2.4% of these ED visits and those who presented equated to 1.3% of total ED visits. The patient flowchart is shown in supplementary material Appendix Figure 1. Rates of investigation, treatment and admission of both adults, pediatric and all patients referred from HealthLine are shown in supplementary material Appendix Table 1.
DISCUSSION
The aim of the study was to evaluate the burden of HealthLine referrals to Saskatoon EDs. If all referred patients presented to the ED as instructed, this would have comprised 2.4% of total ED visits. However, with the reduced compliance following telephone consultation advice found in our study, HealthLine referrals comprised only 1.3% of the total patient visits to Saskatoon EDs. This would equate to approximately four more patient visits per day spread across the three EDs. We do not deem this to be a large nor inappropriate burden. More importantly, if HealthLine did not exist, there is the potential of an extra 21 patients per day presenting to EDs seeking treatment advice. Greater than 70% of the time, HealthLine nurses provided instructions for self-home care or directed patients to make an appointment with their primary care provider.
For the referred patients who presented to the ED as instructed, greater than half of the pediatric population received an intervention or treatment, whereas almost three quarters of the adult population did so. In the studied population, 8.2% of pediatric patients were admitted to the hospital, and of the adult population, 14% were admitted. When compared to the non-HealthLine referred patient population during our study period, the pediatric admission rate was 9.3%, and adult admission rate was 16%. This suggests that the referrals from HealthLine, for the most part, were appropriate. Thus, we believe that, despite the challenges of telephone triage, the Saskatchewan HealthLine system is appropriately referring patients to the EDs for further assessment.
Limitations
A major limitation of this study is missing data. There was no personal health number for 15% of the patients referred to the ED, and 23% of those who actually presented within 48 hours had LWBS or had incomplete charts. As mentioned, details on the type of investigation or treatment were not collected. Within our study population and period, there was poor compliance with the instructions to present to an ED immediately, as only 50.6% of patients did so within 48 hours. It is possible that their situation changed or they did not value the advice they received.
Although there can be a stigma regarding patients referred from HealthLine, these patients’ complaints should not be disregarded.
Further studies could examine why patients did not present to the ED after being instructed to do so.
CONCLUSIONS
Clinicians should not be quick to dismiss someone referred by a medical call centre. During the study period, HealthLine directed only 17.9% of patients to EDs for further evaluation, of which the majority received investigations and/or treatment. These referrals from HealthLine accounted for a small portion (1.3%) of total ED volume.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/cem.2019.420.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Roberta Wiest and Karen Dickson for providing the initial data from HealthLine and allowing the research team to directly observe the telephone consultation process. We are also grateful to Aimee Goss from Health Records at Saskatoon Health Region, and to Shari McKay, the research coordinator from the Department of Family Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, for their support throughout the study.
Competing interests
None declared.