Evaluating patient compliance with nurse advice line recommendations and the impact on healthcare costs.

OBJECTIVE To explore the effect of telephone triage and advice lines in uninsured and managed care populations served by a safety net system and to document the relationship between the patient's initial plan for healthcare, the nurse recommendation, and the patient's subsequent healthcare action. STUDY DESIGN Prospective telephone survey. PATIENTS AND METHODS Of 1538 calls to a nurse advice line in a 28-day period, 710 (46%) callers were selected to be surveyed. Of those, 278 (39%) were surveyed by telephone within 7 days of their call to assess patient compliance with recommendations, the patient's actual healthcare actions, and their satisfaction with the service. RESULTS Patients' reported actions were classified as either (1) home care (46%), (2) clinic visit (27%), or (3) hospital visit (27%). Seventy percent of patients complied with nurse advice line recommendations. Most patient actions (68%) differed from their original healthcare plan, with many (46%) choosing a lower intensity of care. Changes from patients' original healthcare plans had a potential annual net savings of $322 249. CONCLUSION The simple act of calling a nurse triage and advice line corresponds with a change in the reported actions of uninsured and managed care patients and a potential reduction in costs to the safety net system providing their healthcare.

[1]  L. Baraff,et al.  Caller satisfaction with after-hours telephone advice: nurse advice service versus on-call pediatricians. , 2002, Pediatrics.

[2]  C. L. Malakar,et al.  Patient Decision Making: Use of and Adherence to Telephone-Based Nurse Triage Recommendations , 2002, Medical decision making.

[3]  J. D. Moore,et al.  An analysis of patient compliance with nurse recommendations from an after-hours call center. , 2002, The American journal of managed care.

[4]  A A Luberti,et al.  Delivery of pediatric after-hours care by call centers: a multicenter study of parental perceptions and compliance. , 2001, Pediatrics.

[5]  B. Asplin,et al.  Emergency medicine and the debate over the uninsured: a report from the task force on health care and the uninsured. , 2000, Annals of emergency medicine.

[6]  R. Baker,et al.  After-hours telephone triage and advice in private and nonprivate pediatric populations. , 1999, Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine.

[7]  Mark V. Williams,et al.  Obstacles predicting lack of a regular provider and delays in seeking care for patients at an urban public hospital. , 1994, JAMA.

[8]  T. Carruth,et al.  After-hours telephone coverage: the application of an area-wide telephone triage and advice system for pediatric practices. , 1993, Pediatrics.

[9]  G A Pane,et al.  Health care access problems of medically indigent emergency department walk-in patients. , 1991, Annals of emergency medicine.

[10]  J. Benjamin,et al.  Pediatric residents' telephone triage experience: do parents really follow telephone advice? , 2000, Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine.

[11]  Wright Sl The primary care practice in transition: strategies for managing the evolution from fee for service to prepaid care. , 1998 .