Patient Care Access News

Patient Navigation Program Drops Emergency Department Utilization

Patient navigators encouraged follow-up primary care appointments and decreased the odds of repeat emergency department (ED) visits in patients with low baseline ED utilization.

These findings underscore the importance of patient navigation and patient-centered care.

Source: Getty Images

By Sarai Rodriguez

- A Medicaid accountable care organization (ACO) was able to cut emergency department utilization and increase care coordination through patient navigator interaction, a study published in The American Journal of Managed Care found.

Nearly 33 percent of US adults and 13 percent of children enrolled in Medicaid insurance programs experience obstacles when seeking care. Oftentimes, the obstacles derive from physical and economic barriers that hinder patient access to non–emergent care settings.

“Traditionally, EDs and systems of emergency care have not been designed to actively address barriers to care, the social conditions underlying many acute presentations, or patterns of frequent utilization for low-acuity conditions,” Salina Bakshi, MD, MPH, and Lucas C. Carlson, MD, MPH, lead authors of the study stated.