Managing the pressure: emergency hospital admissions in London, 1997-2001
Damiani, Michael.
Managing the pressure: emergency hospital admissions in London, 1997-2001 - London King's Fund 2001
E-books Includes bibliographical references. 28p. : col. ill.., col. maps ; 30cm.
<p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">Pressure on acute NHS trusts from emergency admissions reachesa peak each winter. Despite this, what is causing the pressure isincompletely understood. Managing the Pressure examinesemergency hospital admissions in London over a four-year period.Based on research funded by the former London Regional Office ofthe NHS Executive, it shows that:</span><span style="font-size: 10pt;"> Winter pressures arising from emergency admissions occur atalmost exactly the same time each year; the timing ofemergency admissions is predictable, but the volume is not; respiratory diseases are the main cause ofthe peak indemand, in particular chronic obstructive airways disease inolder people; it is possible to locate the areas where patients admitted asemergencies for respiratory disease live, and therefore targetefforts to reduce the risk of admission.</span></p>
Managing the pressure: emergency hospital admissions in London, 1997-2001 - London King's Fund 2001
E-books Includes bibliographical references. 28p. : col. ill.., col. maps ; 30cm.
<p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">Pressure on acute NHS trusts from emergency admissions reachesa peak each winter. Despite this, what is causing the pressure isincompletely understood. Managing the Pressure examinesemergency hospital admissions in London over a four-year period.Based on research funded by the former London Regional Office ofthe NHS Executive, it shows that:</span><span style="font-size: 10pt;"> Winter pressures arising from emergency admissions occur atalmost exactly the same time each year; the timing ofemergency admissions is predictable, but the volume is not; respiratory diseases are the main cause ofthe peak indemand, in particular chronic obstructive airways disease inolder people; it is possible to locate the areas where patients admitted asemergencies for respiratory disease live, and therefore targetefforts to reduce the risk of admission.</span></p>