Skip to main content
Emergency Medicine Journal : EMJ logoLink to Emergency Medicine Journal : EMJ
. 2004 Sep;21(5):573–574. doi: 10.1136/emj.2002.001420

Quality and effectiveness of an emergency department during weekends

O Miro 1, M Sanchez 1, G Espinosa 1, J Milla 1
PMCID: PMC1726438  PMID: 15333533

Abstract

Methods: Quality and effectiveness markers were determined during 539 consecutive days, comparing them according to the day of the week. Quality markers were the daily percentage of patients who died in the internal medical unit (deaths, D), leave ED without being seen (flights, F); returned to the ED (revisits, R), and the percentage of registered complaints (C). Effectiveness markers were: the "number of patients waiting to be seen" (WP), the "waiting time to be seen" (WT), and the "length of visit" (LV).

Results: Quality and effectiveness of ED do not worsen during weekend days and some markers significantly improved during such days: C experienced a 26% decrease (p = 0.001), WT decreased 65% (p<0.001), WP 59% (p<0.001), and LV 24% (p<0.01). Assessing the relation between daily number of visits to ED and the quality and effectiveness markers, a significant and direct association was found of the number of visits with D, F, R, and WP.

Conclusion: Some of the quality and effectiveness markers of the ED improved during weekend days compared with workdays.

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (72.5 KB).


Articles from Emergency Medicine Journal : EMJ are provided here courtesy of BMJ Publishing Group

RESOURCES