No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 July 2023
Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital (TUTH) is a tertiary care hospital in Kathmandu. The emergency department sees between 130 to 140 cases per day. These patients get initial evaluation and basic investigation for acute emergency management and treatment. Those requiring further treatment are then admitted to the department of General Practice for post emergency care which acts as an observation ward. This step allows for the patients to be observed on a short-term basis and permits patient monitoring and/or treatment for an initial 24-48 hour period and up to a maximum of five days. These steps allow for focused follow up, improved efficiency and minimizes inappropriate admissions to other hospital inpatient wards. This paper evaluates functionality, admission criteria, patient categorization and subspeciality referral to specialty patient care, discharge criteria and cost effectiveness.
A descriptive observational study was carried out of the patients admitted to the observational ward between 2020-2021.
Most articles suggest these wards improve patient satisfaction and clinical care, decrease length of stay, reduce unnecessary inpatient hospital admissions and are useful in fever under evaluations, COPD, poisoning, pneumonia, mild head injuries, high sugar, hypertension, gastroenteritis etc. Around 14% of patients were sent to the observation ward after acute emergency care. 84% were discharged from observation ward with a mean stay of three days and were followed up in community care or GP OPD. Nine percent were admitted to hospital wards, and 7% transferred to yellow/red area emergencies for derange vitals.
Observation wards seem to have advantages, excluding those who will inevitably need longer treatment, reduces cost savings and unnecessary burden of hospital admission.