Direct admit
Direct admissions are patients who are accepted from another site (within region or from out-of-town) and come directly to the next site.
Usually, these patients should go straight to the accepting ward at the second site. However they occasionally move through the ER and are sometimes delayed there. In that case, they need to be collected as Parked in ER.
- There are two types of Direct admits:
- already an Inpatient
- not an Inpatient
Collection Instruction
- The Visit Admit DtTm field and the Accept DtTm field will be the same
- in Tmp Boarding Loc enter <site>_ER, the date and time will be the same as the Visit Admit DtTm field and the Accept DtTm field
The rest is the same as for any other patient, expand to see details. |
|
Data use / Reporting
What reports use this?
inter facility transfers report (semi annual and Fiscal year) given to Critical Care Admin Director and Quality Officer.
- Patient Flow - where patient were have been admitted FROM
How is it used?
- To distinguish the reason of transfer due to bed management reason
- To distinguish the reason of transfer due Medical Necessity reason
- To determine the flow of patients from teaching hospital to teaching hospital, teaching to community, community to teaching, community to community, from outside city/province facility to regional hospital.
Data to be Reported
- for Inpatient direct admit
- Site Ward via ED
- Site ICU via ED
- For Non Inpatient direct Admit (e.g. Emergency, Ambulatory Clinic, PCH, Home, Nursing Station)
- Site Emergency via ED
- Site Ambulatory via ED
- PCH via ED
- Home via ED
- Nursing Station via ED
Legacy
Collection for this was changed as part of the 2016 Time and Place changes.
This used to be relevant to ER Wait and ICU Var 4 - Parked in ER, Parked in ER tmp entry.
This used to be collected as Parked in ER tmp entry, and prior to that as <hosp> - ER (parked) entries in s_dispo table. Changed as of PatientFollow_Project#Transition_dates .
Content of the article was deleted 2016-06-30 so it doesn't inadvertently show up in searches. See article history if needed.
Related articles
Related articles: |