1. Patient Perceptions of Emergency Department Observation Care at Home.
- Author
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Hayden EM, Nentwich LM, Jung OS, Zheng H, and White BA
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Quality of Health Care, Telemedicine, Home Care Services organization & administration, New England, Young Adult, Perception, Aged, 80 and over, Clinical Observation Units, Emergency Service, Hospital, Patient Satisfaction
- Abstract
Introduction: The Virtual Observation Unit (VOU) utilizes telehealth and community paramedicine to provide observation-level care in patients' homes. Patients' experience of this novel program has not been reported. Methods: A phone-based patient experience survey was administered to the patients who were admitted to the VOU at an urban, academic Emergency Department in the Northeast United States. The survey asked about patient's perception of the program's quality of care (0 = worst care possible, 10 = best care possible). t Tests with a Bonferroni adjustment assessed for differences between patient demographic groups. Results: The survey response rate was 40% (124/307). Overall mean scores for perceived quality of care were very high (9.51 ± 1.19). There were no significant differences in patient's perception of quality of care between demographic cohorts of age, gender, race, or ethnicity. Conclusions: Patient experience with a novel VOU program was very positive and did not differ significantly by demographic cohort. Further research is warranted.
- Published
- 2024
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