© 1992 Faculty of Public Health Medicine of the Royal Colleges of Physicians of the United Kingdom
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Inappropriate reattendances in out-patient departments
David Armstrong, Reader in Sociology as applied to Medicine
Ken Brown, Consultant Physician
Patrick Tatford, Consultant Obstetrician
Pauline Armstrong, Research Officer
Department of Public Health Medicine, UMDS (Guy's Campus) London SE1 9RT
Farnborough Hospital
Bromley Hospital
Bromley LMC
Address correspondence to Dr D. Armstrong
In an attempt to identify the number and characteristics of inappropriate reattendances at out-patient clinic
, clinic doctors and patients in two specialties throughout a health district were given a questionnaire to complete on every patient attendance over one week. Four hundred and fiftytwo patients were seen, and 293 were asked to reattend: in some 80 of the latter cases the clinic doctor felt that the GP could nevertheless manage the problem. These inappropriate invitations to reattend were more likely to be given by junior hospital staff to long-standing patients of the clinic attending for monitoring purposes. The patients involved in these inappropriate requests to reattend also tended to think that their GP could manage the problem. It is concluded that discharge policy needs to be made more explicit and training for juniors organized if out-patient resources are to be used most efficiently.
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