Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 25, Issue 3 , Pages 311-316, March 1995

Determinants of Emergency Department Use by Ambulatory Patients at an Urban Public Hospital☆☆★★

Received 21 February 1994; received in revised form 20 June 1994; accepted 3 August 1994.

Abstract 

Study objective: To determine emergency department patients' perceptions of their illness urgency, their attempts to get care elsewhere, and the proportion of patients referred to the ED.

Design: Cross-sectional design with self-administered questionnaires or interviews. Setting: Public hospital in Los Angeles County, California. Participants: Consecutive ambulatory patients totaling 1,190. Results: Most patients thought that they required immediate medical attention, even if they said that their condition was not serious, painful, or debilitating. Half of all patients sought care elsewhere before coming to the ED, and 38.2% had seen a doctor. Forty-four percent of all patients said they were referred to the ED by a doctor or a nurse. Referred patients had illness acuteness similar to that of patients who came to the ED on their own. Conclusion: In addition to their lack of access to other providers, patients' perceived need for immediate care and referrals by health professionals contribute to ED use for non-emergency conditions. [Baker DW, Stevens CD, Brook RH: Determinants of emergency department use by ambulatory patients at an urban public hospital. Ann Emerg Med March 1995;25:311-316.]

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 From the Division of General Internal Medicine* and Department of Emergency Medicine, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance; Departments of Medicine§ and Health Services, UCLA Center for the Health Sciences, Los Angeles; and Value Health Sciences and the Health Science Program, Rand Corp**, Santa Monica, California.

☆☆ Supported by the Los Angeles Health Policy Research Consortium and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Princeton, New Jersey.

 Address for reprints: David W Baker, MD, MPH, Division of Medicine, 69 Butler Street, Atlanta, Georgia 30324, 404-616-5887,

★★ Reprint no. 47/1/62584

PII: S0196-0644(95)70285-7

Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 25, Issue 3 , Pages 311-316, March 1995