Frontiers in Medicine (Jun 2024)

Showcasing the Saudi e-referral system experience: the epidemiology and pattern of referrals utilising nationwide secondary data

  • Nawfal A. Aljerian,
  • Nawfal A. Aljerian,
  • Abdullah A. Alharbi,
  • Reem S. AlOmar,
  • Meshary S. Binhotan,
  • Meshary S. Binhotan,
  • Hani A. Alghamdi,
  • Mohammed S. Arafat,
  • Abdulrahman Aldhabib,
  • Mohammed K. Alabdulaali

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2024.1348442
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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IntroductionReferrals are an integral part of any healthcare system. In the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) an electronic referral (e-referral) system known as the Saudi Medical Appointments and Referrals Centre (SMARC) began formally functioning in 2019. This study aims to showcase the Saudi experience of the e-referral system and explore the epidemiology of referrals nationally.MethodsThis retrospective descriptive study utilised secondary collected data between 2020 and 2021 from the SMARC system. Cross tabulations with significance testing and colour-coded maps were used to highlight the patterns across all regions.ResultsThe study analysed over 600,000 referral requests. The mean age of patients was 40.70 ± 24.66 years. Males had a higher number of referrals (55.43%). Referrals in 2021 were higher than those in 2020 (56.21%). Both the Autumn and Winter seasons had the highest number of referrals (27.09% and 27.43%, respectively). The Surgical specialty followed by Medicine had the highest referrals (26.07% and 22.27%, respectively). Life-saving referrals in the Central region were more than double those in other regions (14.56%). Emergency referrals were also highest in the Southern regions (44.06%). The Central and Eastern regions had higher referrals due to unavailable sub-speciality (68.86% and 67.93%, respectively). The Southern regions had higher referrals due to both unavailable machine and unavailable beds (18.44% and 6.24%, respectively).ConclusionThis study shows a unique system in which referrals are between secondary, tertiary, and specialised care. It also highlights areas of improvement for equitable resource allocation and specialised care in slightly problematic areas as well as the use of population density in future planning.

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