BMJ 1995;310:207-208 (28 January)

Editorials

Rising emergency admissions

No good evidence yet that this trend is inappropriate

The National Association of Health Authorities and Trusts reports that providers of secondary care are under pressure from ever rising numbers of acute medical admissions, which were up between 7% and 13% from average rates during 1993-4.1 This is not a recent concern: the Audit Commission, extrapolating from routinely collected hospital data, predicted a doubling of acute admissions to Birmingham hospitals between 1987 and 1996.2

The National Association of Health Authorities and Trusts suggests that the probable causes of the increase include more detected illness, raised expectations of general practitioners (especially fundholders), premature discharge, and worries over litigation. Others point accusingly to variations in general practitioners' referral rates; Acheson was irritated in 1985 that "a phenomenon so gross can continue to defy analysis."3 Fundholders are accused of protecting budgets, although they generally do not have to pay for emergency care.

Unfortunately, . . . [Full text of this article]


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Rising emergency admissions
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  • Pearson, M., Wistow, G. (1995). The boundary between health care and social care. BMJ 311: 208-209 [Full text]  
  • Holdsworth, J D (1995). Rising emergency admissions. BMJ 310: 867-867 [Full text]  
  • Wardrope, J, Kidner, N L, Edhouse, J (1995). Bed crises are occurring almost daily in some hospitals. BMJ 310: 868-868 [Full text]  
  • Chishty, V., Packer, C. (1995). Age, distance from a hospital, and level of deprivation are influential factors. BMJ 310: 867a-867 [Full text]  
  • Chadwick, D. R (1995). GPs must take some responsibility. BMJ 310: 867b-867 [Full text]  
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