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Funding hospital-based emergency services

Journal of Ambulatory Care Management, 1993
In the final analysis, implementing the ED funding model will not generate additional dollars for hospitals; rather the funding model will function as a tool for reallocating existing health care dollars. This function is particularly important as government funding for health care is subjected to increasing financial restraint. As such, the ED funding
openaire   +3 more sources

Monitoring System for Emergency Service in a Hospital Environment [PDF]

open access: possible2019 IEEE 6th Portuguese Meeting on Bioengineering (ENBENG), 2019
The hospital emergency service remains the first choice for the vast majority of patients. The large influx of hospital emergency services, combined with the lack of health professionals, often makes the patients susceptible to excessive waiting times. As a result, their health condition may worse after triage, until they are observed by a doctor.
A. Reis   +5 more
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A retrospective study of adolescents' visits to a general hospital psychiatric emergency service.

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1987
Characteristics of 100 visits by adolescents (less than 18 years old) to a psychiatric emergency service were examined and compared with those of 100 visits by adults.
J. Hillard, M. Slomowitz, L. Levi
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Expanding Psychiatric Service in a Hospital Emergency Room

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1979
Senior medical residents were used to extend psychiatric coverage in a busy hospital emergency room. Their service was supported by the backup consultation of senior psychiatric physicians. The medical residents worked in conjunction with psychiatric residents to provide 24-hour daily emergency psychiatric service to more than 350 patients during a 12 ...
Gary Nyman   +3 more
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Emergent, urgent, and elective admissions. Studies in a general hospital psychiatric emergency service.

Archives of General Psychiatry, 1969
THE HE number of admissions to emergency services of general hospitals has risen markedly during recent years. A study of 330 general hospitals by McCarroll and Skudder, 1 for example, revealed an increase of 120% in emergency room visits between 1945 ...
T. Trier, R. Levy
semanticscholar   +1 more source

A General Hospital as a Focus of Community Psychiatry: A Trouble Shooting Clinic Combines Important Functions as Part of Hospital's Emergency Service

, 1960
The psychiatry department of a general hospital can serve a preventive as well as a therapeutic function. The Trouble-Shooting Clinic here described combines the two aspects, serving in major emergencies as well as in minor problems involving guidance ...
L. Bellak
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The private general hospital's psychiatric emergency service in a decade of transition.

Hospital & community psychiatry, 1981
The psychiatric emergency ward of the private general hospital is faced with increasing demands for services and a changing role as a result of the progression of deinstitutionalization and shifts in the relationships between public and private ...
E. Bassuk, S. Schoonover
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Reasons for hospitalization from a psychiatric emergency service

The Psychiatric Quarterly, 1974
The reasons for hospitalization of 341 patients from a university-based psychiatric emergency service were studied. The need for protection was the most frequent reason for hospitalization (51%), with the need for inpatient diagnostic studies or treatment second in frequency (36%).
Haroutun M. Babigian, Gary D. Hanson
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[Medical responsibility in hospital emergency services].

Acta medica portuguesa, 1994
Questions of medical responsibility of doctors working at the emergency services of the public hospitals have been increasing during recent years in Portugal. Several reasons may be contributing to the present situation and some of them are analysed: the organization of the service, the triage, the team work and the co-responsibilization of the ...
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The crisis in United States hospital emergency services

International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance, 2011
PurposeEmergency services are critical for high‐quality healthcare service provision to support acute illness, trauma and disaster response. The greater availability of emergency services decreases waiting time, improves clinical outcomes and enhances local community well being.
Emily D. Ferguson, Jeffrey P. Harrison
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