Funding to support pressing emergency care issues
Thursday, 29 February, 2024
With demand for emergency department (ED) services in Australia growing at a fast pace and wait times increasing, the Emergency Medicine Foundation has announced $1.3 million in funding for new research grants dedicated to addressing pressing care issues to improve outcomes.
Professor Hugh Grantham, Emergency Medicine Foundation (EMF) Chair, said demand for ED services in Australia had outpaced population growth since 2011鈥12, resulting in more than 8.8 million ED patient presentations in 2022鈥23.
鈥淲ithout research and novel solutions to this complex issue, our hospitals will continue to struggle under increasing pressure and patients will suffer,鈥 Grantham said.
In addition to the EMF-funded major investigation into barriers to effective patient flow in Queensland鈥檚 public hospitals, 22 new emergency medicine projects were launched at the recent EMF Grants Award Ceremony. These projects will include innovative ways to improve pain management in children, treating diabetic patients, and optimising treatment for patients who call an ambulance for nausea or vomiting.
A recent EMF-funded mental health study, SAFE STEPS, is estimated to save the Australian health system $30 million. The project aims to prevent mental health patients reaching crisis point and requiring a visit to ED with possible hospital admission.
Associate Professor Manaan Kar Ray, Divisional Director (Mental Health), Princess Alexandra 黑料吃瓜群网 said busy EDs were ill-suited for patients with mental health challenges, but during a crisis there were few alternatives for rapid assessment and support.
鈥淓ach year, an increasing number of mental health patients receive better support in the community and have been successfully diverted away from EDs,鈥 Kar Ray said.
鈥淲ithout early detection and enhanced community support, a large proportion of these patients would have needed an inpatient stay.
鈥淲hile demand is a contributing factor, EDs are currently being impacted by various factors across the entire health system,鈥 Kar Ray said.
Grantham said bottlenecks triggered by uneven patient flow often caused delays in hospital admissions, but long wait times for hospital beds did not begin and end in the ED.
鈥淎mbulance ramping and ED overcrowding are symptoms of complex whole-of-health issues,鈥 Grantham said.
鈥淭he issue of system-wide delays from triage to admission to treatment and discharge is one of the Australian healthcare system鈥檚 most challenging problems and it severely impacts vulnerable patient groups, including aged care and mental health patients.鈥
Early results from EMF鈥檚 flagship patient flow project show obstacles to efficient treatment and discharge are caused by bottlenecks throughout the system.
鈥淭hese issues result in long ED wait times and new research shows improving patient flow requires whole-of-system solutions,鈥 Grantham said.
鈥淩esearchers have found most efforts to improve patient flow focused on ED efficiencies but interventions for the remainder of the patient journey were largely neglected. We need to ensure there are initiatives to improve patient flow pre-ED, within-ED and post-ED.鈥
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