Introduction: To decrease waiting times within accident and emergency (A&E) departments, various initiatives have been suggested including the use of a separate stream of care for minor injuries (“fast track”). This study aimed to assess whether a separate stream of minor injuries care in a UK A&E department decreases the waiting time, without delaying the care of those with more serious injury. Intervention: A doctor saw any ambulant patients with injuries not requiring an examination couch or an urgent intervention. Any patients requiring further treatment were returned to the sub-wait area until a nurse could see them in another cubicle. Method: Data were retrospectively extracted from the routine hospital information systems for all patients attending the A&E department for five weeks before the institution of the separate stream system and for five weeks after. Results: 13 918 new patients were seen during the 10 week study period; 7117 (51.1%) in the first five week period and 6801 (49.9%) in the second five week period when a separate stream was operational. Recorded time to see a doctor ranged from 0–850 minutes. Comparison of the two five week periods demonstrated that the proportion of patients waiting less than 30 and less than 60 minutes both improved (p<0.0001). The relative risk of waiting more than one hour decreased by 32%. The improvements in waiting times were not at the expense of patients with more urgent needs. Conclusions: The introduction of a separate stream for minor injuries can produce an improvement in the number of trauma patients waiting over an hour of about 30%. If this is associated with an increase in consultant presence on the shop floor it may be possible to achieve a 50% improvement. It is recommended that departments use a separate stream for minor injuries to decrease the number of patients enduring long waits in A&E departments.
[1]
J. Fleiss.
Statistical methods for rates and proportions
,
1974
.
[2]
G. Fleisher,et al.
Complaints and compliments in the pediatric emergency department
,
1991,
Pediatric emergency care.
[3]
H W Meislin,et al.
Fast Track: urgent care within a teaching hospital emergency department: can it work?
,
1988,
Annals of emergency medicine.
[4]
J. Pinkney,et al.
"Fast track" admission for acute myocardial infarction.
,
1992,
BMJ.
[5]
M. Hunt,et al.
A review of 7 years of complaints in an inner-city accident and emergency department.
,
1991,
Archives of emergency medicine.
[6]
F. Lau,et al.
Waiting time in an urban accident and emergency department--a way to improve it.
,
1997,
Journal of accident & emergency medicine.
[7]
H. Binns,et al.
Fast track and the pediatric emergency department: resource utilization and patients outcomes.
,
1999,
Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.
[8]
B. Finlayson.
Fast tracking patients with a proximal femoral fracture.
,
1996,
Journal of accident & emergency medicine.
[9]
C. Nixon,et al.
Care of minor injuries by emergency nurse practitioners or junior doctors: a randomised controlled trial
,
1999,
The Lancet.