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Exploring the lengthiest ambulatory breast surgery clinic appointments: is the patient the problem?
Prolonged outpatient clinic appointments can disrupt schedules, impacting patients and providers. We sought to define features of the longest ambulatory appointments in a breast surgery clinic, and to ascertain whether patients attending these appointments consistently have protracted appointments....
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Published in: | Gland surgery 2021-02, Vol.10 (2), p.551-558 |
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description | Prolonged outpatient clinic appointments can disrupt schedules, impacting patients and providers. We sought to define features of the longest ambulatory appointments in a breast surgery clinic, and to ascertain whether patients attending these appointments consistently have protracted appointments.
A single-institution retrospective cohort study was conducted of breast surgery clinic patients, January 2017 to May 2019, and the longest 1% of appointments identified using a real-time patient tracking system. A primary chart review was performed, and data abstracted. Other appointments attended by these patients were identified, and the ratio of appointments >75th percentile duration (protracted appointments) to the total appointments during the study period was calculated, enabling comparison for patients with consistently protracted (ratio >50%)
sporadically protracted appointments (≤50%). Descriptive analysis was performed, and results reported as medians with inter-quartile ranges.
A total of 15,265 clinic appointments were identified, and the longest 148 (exceeding 244 minutes) analyzed. Median appointment length was 264 minutes (inter-quartile range: 253-290). 70% were new patient appointments, and 54% of patients underwent a test/investigation that day. A minority were obese (39%), smokers (41%), diagnosed with a psychiatric comorbidity (34%), had a genetic cancer syndrome (22%), or received unexpected news at their appointment (16%). Of 118 patients with multiple appointments, 26% had consistently protracted appointments and 74% sporadically protracted appointments.
The lengthiest appointments are usually newly diagnosed cancer patients. Only a minority of patients have consistently protracted appointments, implying that a patient's previously prolonged appointment may not predict future long appointments. |
doi_str_mv | 10.21037/gs-20-623 |
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A single-institution retrospective cohort study was conducted of breast surgery clinic patients, January 2017 to May 2019, and the longest 1% of appointments identified using a real-time patient tracking system. A primary chart review was performed, and data abstracted. Other appointments attended by these patients were identified, and the ratio of appointments >75th percentile duration (protracted appointments) to the total appointments during the study period was calculated, enabling comparison for patients with consistently protracted (ratio >50%)
sporadically protracted appointments (≤50%). Descriptive analysis was performed, and results reported as medians with inter-quartile ranges.
A total of 15,265 clinic appointments were identified, and the longest 148 (exceeding 244 minutes) analyzed. Median appointment length was 264 minutes (inter-quartile range: 253-290). 70% were new patient appointments, and 54% of patients underwent a test/investigation that day. A minority were obese (39%), smokers (41%), diagnosed with a psychiatric comorbidity (34%), had a genetic cancer syndrome (22%), or received unexpected news at their appointment (16%). Of 118 patients with multiple appointments, 26% had consistently protracted appointments and 74% sporadically protracted appointments.
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A single-institution retrospective cohort study was conducted of breast surgery clinic patients, January 2017 to May 2019, and the longest 1% of appointments identified using a real-time patient tracking system. A primary chart review was performed, and data abstracted. Other appointments attended by these patients were identified, and the ratio of appointments >75th percentile duration (protracted appointments) to the total appointments during the study period was calculated, enabling comparison for patients with consistently protracted (ratio >50%)
sporadically protracted appointments (≤50%). Descriptive analysis was performed, and results reported as medians with inter-quartile ranges.
A total of 15,265 clinic appointments were identified, and the longest 148 (exceeding 244 minutes) analyzed. Median appointment length was 264 minutes (inter-quartile range: 253-290). 70% were new patient appointments, and 54% of patients underwent a test/investigation that day. A minority were obese (39%), smokers (41%), diagnosed with a psychiatric comorbidity (34%), had a genetic cancer syndrome (22%), or received unexpected news at their appointment (16%). Of 118 patients with multiple appointments, 26% had consistently protracted appointments and 74% sporadically protracted appointments.
The lengthiest appointments are usually newly diagnosed cancer patients. Only a minority of patients have consistently protracted appointments, implying that a patient's previously prolonged appointment may not predict future long appointments.</description><subject>Original</subject><issn>2227-684X</issn><issn>2227-8575</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2021</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><recordid>eNpVUc1PwyAcJUbjlrmLf4Dp0ZhU-SjQetCYZX4kS7zs4I1QRjsMLRVa4_57cZuLnn4fPN578AA4R_AaI0j4TR1SDFOGyREYY4x5mlNOj_c9y7O3EZiG8A4hRARnjOFTMCKEw5ySfAzU_Kuzzpu2Tvq1Tqxu635tdOgT2ZSDlb3zm6T0WsZNGHyt46isaY1KZNc50_aNbvtwm5iwJehkb-Ji13tXWt3cn4GTStqgp_s6AcvH-XL2nC5en15mD4tURT99mpWIFYRVXKkcSUoLIumK5QWTrKDxTVhmFVYYcckYpLQkBUV6BXmVY73ClEzA3Y62G8pGr1S04aUVnTeN9BvhpBH_T1qzFrX7FLzIMsiySHC5J_DuY4h_IBoTlLZWttoNQWAKEaY0Yz9aVzuo8i4Er6uDDIJim4uo4wUoYi4RfPHX2AH6mwL5Bv_Iilc</recordid><startdate>20210201</startdate><enddate>20210201</enddate><creator>Kagedan, Daniel J</creator><creator>Takabe, Kazuaki</creator><general>AME Publishing Company</general><scope>NPM</scope><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>7X8</scope><scope>5PM</scope></search><sort><creationdate>20210201</creationdate><title>Exploring the lengthiest ambulatory breast surgery clinic appointments: is the patient the problem?</title><author>Kagedan, Daniel J ; Takabe, Kazuaki</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c337t-4b16936f7cc81a5593a5d6896a6955752a4f2c217a66055b3951ed07f82ed253</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2021</creationdate><topic>Original</topic><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Kagedan, Daniel J</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Takabe, Kazuaki</creatorcontrib><collection>PubMed</collection><collection>CrossRef</collection><collection>MEDLINE - Academic</collection><collection>PubMed Central (Full Participant titles)</collection><jtitle>Gland surgery</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Kagedan, Daniel J</au><au>Takabe, Kazuaki</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Exploring the lengthiest ambulatory breast surgery clinic appointments: is the patient the problem?</atitle><jtitle>Gland surgery</jtitle><addtitle>Gland Surg</addtitle><date>2021-02-01</date><risdate>2021</risdate><volume>10</volume><issue>2</issue><spage>551</spage><epage>558</epage><pages>551-558</pages><issn>2227-684X</issn><eissn>2227-8575</eissn><abstract>Prolonged outpatient clinic appointments can disrupt schedules, impacting patients and providers. We sought to define features of the longest ambulatory appointments in a breast surgery clinic, and to ascertain whether patients attending these appointments consistently have protracted appointments.
A single-institution retrospective cohort study was conducted of breast surgery clinic patients, January 2017 to May 2019, and the longest 1% of appointments identified using a real-time patient tracking system. A primary chart review was performed, and data abstracted. Other appointments attended by these patients were identified, and the ratio of appointments >75th percentile duration (protracted appointments) to the total appointments during the study period was calculated, enabling comparison for patients with consistently protracted (ratio >50%)
sporadically protracted appointments (≤50%). Descriptive analysis was performed, and results reported as medians with inter-quartile ranges.
A total of 15,265 clinic appointments were identified, and the longest 148 (exceeding 244 minutes) analyzed. Median appointment length was 264 minutes (inter-quartile range: 253-290). 70% were new patient appointments, and 54% of patients underwent a test/investigation that day. A minority were obese (39%), smokers (41%), diagnosed with a psychiatric comorbidity (34%), had a genetic cancer syndrome (22%), or received unexpected news at their appointment (16%). Of 118 patients with multiple appointments, 26% had consistently protracted appointments and 74% sporadically protracted appointments.
The lengthiest appointments are usually newly diagnosed cancer patients. Only a minority of patients have consistently protracted appointments, implying that a patient's previously prolonged appointment may not predict future long appointments.</abstract><cop>China (Republic : 1949- )</cop><pub>AME Publishing Company</pub><pmid>33708538</pmid><doi>10.21037/gs-20-623</doi><tpages>8</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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title | Exploring the lengthiest ambulatory breast surgery clinic appointments: is the patient the problem? |
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