Positive impacts of changes to a tertiary hospital after‐hours endocrine and diabetes on‐call service

2019 
AIM: To examine the impact of changes to the endocrine/diabetes after-hours service model of care at a major tertiary children's hospital in Australia. The model aimed to enhance the independence of families and reduce dependency on after-hours calls to health professionals. METHODS: The after-hours activity was captured prospectively using an iPad with a customised FileMaker database. Data were collected for 9 months prior to and for 8 months after the implementation of a modified model of service. Questionnaires gathered information from endocrine junior medical officers (JMOs) and other hospital staff. Data on emergency department visits were analysed for presentations before and after the implementation of the service changes. RESULTS: Changes to the after-hours service resulted in a significant reduction in median calls from 9 (range 0-39) to 2 (range 0-7) per shift. The number of shifts with no calls increased from 2 to 24% and the number of shifts with <3 calls increased from 8 to 60%. Disturbed nights (calls between 10 pm and 6 am) decreased from 75 to 29%. Junior medical officer experience was positive and there was no perceivable increase in workload from in-hospital staff. The number of endocrine patients presenting to the emergency department did not change significantly following the implementation of the new after-hours service. CONCLUSION: This is the only Australian study to prospectively gather accurate on-call data in order to elucidate the impact of changing a hospital's after-hours endocrine/diabetes service to a model that enhanced family empowerment and independence. Historical 24-h on-call service models are not indispensable, and changes can improve sustainability without compromising patient care.
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