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Emergency Department Utilization in Germany (INDEED)

Charité University Medicine Berlin logo

Charité University Medicine Berlin

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Emergencies

Treatments

Other: data extraction

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03224078
EA4/086/17

Details and patient eligibility

About

The overall aim of INDEED is to facilitate trans-sectoral and interdisciplinary health services research of emergency care in Germany.

Clinical hospital data from 15 to 20 emergency departments in Germany will be linked to routine ambulatory health care data provided by the Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians (Kassenärztliche Vereinigung, KV). INDEED will identify health care gaps and inadequate resource allocation as well as develop strategies for adaptations of the health care system to existing demands.

Full description

B a c k g r o u n d:

Emergency departments nationally and internationally are challenged by a continuously increasing number and complexity of patients and consequent crowding. International studies showed that crowding is associated with unfavourable outcomes. Emergency departments are an important interface between the outpatient and inpatient health care sectors. Health care sectors in Germany are not organisationally cross-linked and data linkage for analysis of the health care system is not generally performed. Hence, there is a lack of data to trans-sectorally describe and monitor patients' pathways and patterns of care in the health care system.

RESEARCH AIMS:

The overall aim of INDEED is to facilitate trans-sectoral and interdisciplinary health services research of emergency care in Germany.

The primary objective of the project is to assess the trans-sectoral utilization of health care services of patients 2 years prior and 1 year after treatment in an emergency department. Patterns of adequate, inadequate and potentially avoidable care will be examined.

The secondary aim is to identify patient clusters with comparable needs of health care provision. Within clusters and for all patients combined INDEED will examine health care needs and gaps as well as factors that influence emergency department visits, disease progression, comorbidities and mortality.

METHODS:

Clinical hospital data from 15 to 20 emergency departments in Germany will be linked to routine ambulatory health care data provided by the Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians (Kassenärztliche Vereinigung, KV).

A secondary data analysis of linked routinely collected hospital information system and health insurance data of all adult patients that were treated with any condition in one of the participating emergency departments in 2016 (n≈680.000 cases) will be performed. Data analysis will cover the pattern of utilization of health care, identification of subgroups with comparable need of health care provision, of factors that influence emergency department visits and factors for ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSC) or inpatient treatment. Study results will be evaluated considering age, multimorbidity and gender aspects as well as the health system and health economic perspective. Thereby INDEED will identify health care gaps and inadequate resource allocation as well as develop strategies for adaptations of the health care system to existing demands.

Enrollment

680,000 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • adult ED patients who attended one of the participating EDs in 2016
  • patients with public health insurance

Exclusion criteria

  • no exclusion criteria are applied

Trial design

680,000 participants in 1 patient group

adult Emergency Department Patients
Description:
adult patients that were treated with any condition in one of the participating emergency departments in 2016 (n≈680.000 cases)
Treatment:
Other: data extraction

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Martin Möckel, Prof. Dr.; Anna Slagman, Dr., MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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