Emergency Departments (EDs) in Queensland hospitals are often overcrowded, leading to long wait times and reduced patient satisfaction. At Logan Hospital, patients with surgical problems currently go through a full ED assessment before seeing a surgical specialist, causing unnecessary delays. To address this, we’re creating a Surgical Rapid Assessment Unit (SRAU). This unit will be open on weekdays from 8 am to 4 pm and will directly assess stable patients with surgical issues, bypassing the usual ED process. This means patients will be seen faster by the right specialist.
Our research aims to evaluate how well the SRAU works. We’ll look at:
1. How it affects patient wait times and overall hospital stay
2. Patient safety
3. Whether it’s cost-effective
4. Challenges in implementation
This project is innovative because it fundamentally changes the patient journey, allowing direct surgical assessment without the usual step of ED evaluation. This approach could improve care quality and use hospital resources more efficiently. If successful, the SRAU model could significantly reduce ED congestion and improve patient flow. This model of care could be applied statewide and nationally to other Australian hospitals facing similar challenges.
We’ll use multiple research methods, including comparing data before and after SRAU implementation, surveying patients and staff, and analysing costs. The results will provide strong evidence on whether this model works and how it could be adopted by other Queensland hospitals, potentially leading to widespread improvements in emergency surgical care across the state.