医学
医疗补助
专业
肾病科
心理干预
家庭医学
肾脏疾病
内科学
肾结石
急诊科
急诊医学
多学科方法
医疗保健
护理部
社会学
社会科学
经济
经济增长
作者
Megan Stout,Molly A. McNamara,Tasha Posid,Alicia Scimeca,Aliza Khuhro,Matthew Murtha,Max Yudovich,Dinah Diab,Ganesh Shidham,Elizabeth Weinandy,Bodo E. Knudsen,Michael Sourial
标识
DOI:10.1089/end.2022.0564
摘要
There is a call to improve Medicaid patient access to health care, enhance quality and outcomes of care, and reduce overall financial burden. We sought to build a comprehensive kidney stone program to help patients navigate through the acute and preventive aspects of stone disease by increasing multidisciplinary referrals and compliance with recommendations and decreasing no-show rates at first follow-up and repeat stone encounters after initial evaluation. A collaborative multidisciplinary program was established at our single institution consisting of urology, nephrology, and dietary specialists to be piloted over a 3-year period. Medicaid-designated patients were evaluated during new patient encounters by urology specialists and then followed for outpatient follow-up, including specialty referrals to nephrology specialists and dietitians, for targeted preventive measures. Subjective compliance reports by patients following interventions and no-show rates at subsequent follow-ups were documented. We also followed patients 6 months beyond the initial encounter to assess repeat Emergency Department (ED) visits for acute stone episodes. One hundred eighty-three Medicaid-designated stone patients were evaluated from 2018 to 2021. Sixty-eight percent of patients identified as White, 18% identified as Black/African American, and 14% identified as "Other." Patients underwent specialty referrals to nephrology or a dietician in 47% and 42% of cases, respectively. Since the program's implementation, reported patient compliance and referrals to multidisciplinary specialists increased from 72.9% to 81.30% and 21.2% to 56.20%, respectively. Repeat ED visits for stone-related encounters within 6 months of initial presentation remained relatively stable (from 17.60% to 18.9%), while no-show rates at first follow-up decreased from 20.0% to 6.30% by study conclusion. There is continued supporting evidence for the importance of a comprehensive kidney stone program specifically for patients of lower socioeconomic status following a 3-year implementation at our institution. Encouraging results indicate increased access to multidisciplinary specialty referrals, with improvement in follow-up and reported compliance related to stone prevention strategies.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI