Closing the Referral Loop: an Analysis of Primary Care Referrals to Specialists in a Large Health System.

dc.contributor.author

Patel, Malhar P

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Schettini, Priscille

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O'Leary, Colin P

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Bosworth, Hayden B

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Anderson, John B

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Shah, Kevin P

dc.date.accessioned

2024-01-26T01:18:24Z

dc.date.available

2024-01-26T01:18:24Z

dc.date.issued

2018-05

dc.description.abstract

PURPOSE:Ideally, a referral from a primary care physician (PCP) to a specialist results in a completed specialty appointment with results available to the PCP. This is defined as "closing the referral loop." As health systems grow more complex, regulatory bodies increase vigilance, and reimbursement shifts towards value, closing the referral loop becomes a patient safety, regulatory, and financial imperative. OBJECTIVE/DESIGN:To assess the ability of a large health system to close the referral loop, we used electronic medical record (EMR)-generated data to analyze referrals from a large primary care network to 20 high-volume specialties between July 1, 2015 and June 30, 2016. MAIN MEASURES:The primary metric was documented specialist appointment completion rate. Explanatory analyses included documented appointment scheduling rate, individual clinic differences, appointment wait times, and geographic distance to appointments. KEY RESULTS:Of the 103,737 analyzed referral scheduling attempts, only 36,072 (34.8%) resulted in documented complete appointments. Low documented appointment scheduling rates (38.9% of scheduling attempts lacked appointment dates), individual clinic differences in closing the referral loop, and significant differences in wait times and distances to specialists between complete and incomplete appointments drove this gap. Other notable findings include high variation in wait times among specialties and correlation between high wait times and low documented appointment completion rates. CONCLUSIONS:The rate of closing the referral loop in this health system is low. Low appointment scheduling rates, individual clinic differences, and patient access issues of wait times and geographic proximity explain much of the gap. This problem is likely common among large health systems with complex provider networks and referral scheduling. Strategies that improve scheduling, decrease variation among clinics, and improve patient access will likely improve rates of closing the referral loop. More research is necessary to determine the impact of these changes and other potential driving factors.

dc.identifier

10.1007/s11606-018-4392-z

dc.identifier.issn

0884-8734

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1525-1497

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/29885

dc.language

eng

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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Journal of general internal medicine

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10.1007/s11606-018-4392-z

dc.rights.uri

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0

dc.subject

Humans

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Appointments and Schedules

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Referral and Consultation

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Primary Health Care

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Delivery of Health Care, Integrated

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Closing the Referral Loop: an Analysis of Primary Care Referrals to Specialists in a Large Health System.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Bosworth, Hayden B|0000-0001-6188-9825

pubs.begin-page

715

pubs.end-page

721

pubs.issue

5

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Duke

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School of Medicine

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Basic Science Departments

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Clinical Science Departments

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Institutes and Centers

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Family Medicine and Community Health

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Medicine

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

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Family Medicine and Community Health, Family Medicine

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Medicine, General Internal Medicine

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Duke Clinical Research Institute

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development

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Initiatives

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Duke Science & Society

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Population Health Sciences

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Duke Innovation & Entrepreneurship

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Behavioral Medicine & Neurosciences

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Duke - Margolis Center For Health Policy

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

33

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