BMC Health Services Research (Dec 2022)

Impact of the 24-hour time target policy for emergency departments in South Korea: a mixed method study in a single medical center

  • Sookyung Park,
  • Hansol Chang,
  • Weon Jung,
  • Se Uk Lee,
  • Sung Yeon Hwang,
  • Hee Yoon,
  • Won Chul Cha,
  • Tae Gun Shin,
  • Min Seob Sim,
  • Ik Joon Jo,
  • Taerim Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-022-08861-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background In South Korea, after the spread of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome epidemic was aggravated by long stays in crowded emergency departments (EDs), a 24-hour target policy for EDs was introduced to prevent crowding and reduce patients' length of stay (LOS). The policy requires at least 95% of all patients to be admitted, discharged or transferred from an ED within 24 hours of arrival. This study analyzes the effects of the 24-hour target policy on ED LOS and compliance rates and describes the consequences of the policy. Methods A mixed-methods approach was applied to a retrospective observational study of ED visits combined with a survey of medical professionals. The primary measure was ED LOS, and the secondary measure was policy compliance rate which refers to the proportion of patient visits with a LOS shorter than 24 hours. Patient flow, quality of care, patient safety, staff workload, and staff satisfaction were also investigated through surveys. Mann–Whitney U and χ2 tests were used to compare variables before and after the introduction of the policy. Results The median ED LOS increased from 3.9 hours (interquartile range [IQR] = 2.1–7.6) to 4.5 hours (IQR = 2.5–8.5) after the policy was introduced. This was likely influenced by the average monthly number of patients, which greatly increased from 4819 (SD = 340) to 5870 (SD = 462) during the same period. The proportion of patients with ED LOS greater than 24 hours remained below5% only after 6 months of policy implementation, but the number of patients whose disposition was decided at 23 hours increased by 4.84 times. Survey results suggested that patient flow and quality of care improved slightly, while the workload of medical staff worsened. Conclusions After implementing the 24-hour target policy, the proportion of patients whose ED LOS exceeded 24 hours decreased, even though the median ED LOS increased. However, the unintended consequences of the policy were observed such as increased medical professional workload and abrupt expulsion of patients before 24 hours.

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