Evidence-Based Patient Triage: Optimizing Healthcare Delivery Through Appropriate Site-of-Care Selection
Dianna Ehlert

TL;DR
This paper reviews evidence on patient triage systems to improve healthcare delivery by directing patients to the right care settings.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive evidence synthesis on structured triage protocols for optimizing patient care settings.
Findings
Structured triage protocols effectively direct patients to appropriate care settings.
Evidence from multiple sources supports improved outcomes through proper site-of-care selection.
Abstract
Healthcare systems face increasing pressure from emergency department overcrowding, rising costs, and suboptimal patient outcomes. This paper presents a narrative evidence synthesis and integrative review of the published literature on patient triage systems that direct patients to appropriate care settings (emergency departments, urgent care centers, and primary care facilities). The evidence synthesis methodology employed combines findings from systematic reviews, observational studies, cost-effectiveness analyses, and quality improvement reports to provide a comprehensive overview of triage implementation and outcomes. Data sources include peer-reviewed publications from emergency medicine, primary care, and health services research journals; government health statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ);…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmergency and Acute Care Studies · Trauma and Emergency Care Studies · Disaster Response and Management
