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Angina manifests as chest pain, tightness, or squeezing discomfort typically located behind the breastbone. It can radiate to the neck, jaw, shoulders, and inner aspects of the upper arms, most commonly the left arm. Patients may experience shortness of breath, fatigue, profuse sweating, dizziness, indigestion, heartburn, palpitations, anxiety, and vomiting as accompanying symptoms. This pain often lasts a few minutes and is triggered by physical exertion, emotional stress, heavy meals, or cold...
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Cardiology clinic follow-up did not decrease return visits to the ED for chest pain patients.

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This summary is machine-generated.

A program to expedite cardiology appointments for low-risk chest pain patients did not reduce repeat emergency department visits. However, insured patients were more likely to attend their scheduled follow-up appointments.

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Area of Science:

  • Cardiology
  • Emergency Medicine
  • Health Services Research

Background:

  • Initiated a program for rapid myocardial infarction rule-out and cardiologist appointments within 72 hours for low-risk chest pain patients.
  • Program aimed to improve timely cardiac care and reduce emergency department (ED) utilization.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To determine if a program offering expedited cardiology appointments reduced return ED visits for chest pain.
  • To identify factors influencing patient adherence to scheduled cardiology clinic appointments.

Main Methods:

  • Retrospective review of chest pain patients discharged from the ED with a cardiology appointment.
  • Comparison of repeat ED visits between patients who kept appointments and those who did not.
  • Multivariate analysis to identify factors associated with keeping appointments.

Main Results:

  • 70% of patients (265/381) kept their cardiology appointments.
  • No significant difference in return ED visits between patients who kept appointments (0.28 visits) and no-shows (0.39 visits).
  • Patients with commercial insurance were significantly more likely to keep appointments than those with Medicare, Medicaid, or no insurance.

Conclusions:

  • The program did not demonstrate a reduction in repeat ED visits for chest pain.
  • Patient insurance status was a key factor associated with keeping follow-up cardiology appointments.