Asplin, Brent
Institution: HealthPartners
Research Foundation, Minneapolis
Grant Title: Emergency
Department Crowding: Causes and Consequences
Grant Number: K08 HS13007
Duration: 5
years (2002-2007)
Total Award: $616,950
Project Description: The goal of this project
includes three types of factors that contribute to Emergency Room crowding:
input, throughput, and output factors. Project Change will determine if
an Advanced Access (AA) appointment system is associated with reduced Emergency
Department (ED) utilization rates. The ED Crowding Project will develop
feasible and reproducible measures of ED crowding. The ED Access Project
was a national survey of ambulatory clinics that estimated the availability and
timing of outpatient appointments for medical and surgical conditions requiring
urgent ED follow-up care according to insurance status.
Career Goals: Dr. Asplin is the Department
Head of Emergency Medicine at Regions Hospital in St. Paul, MN, a research
clinician at HealthPartners Research Foundation, and an Assistant Professor of
Emergency Medicine at the University of Minnesota. His primary career
goal is to conduct quality health services research that will promote
evidence-based reforms of the U.S. health care system. He also continues
to practice emergency medicine in an urban safety net hospital. A
secondary career goal is to achieve academic promotion in emergency medicine by
publishing peer reviewed articles; conducting research; and participating in
organized emergency medicine activities through research presentations and
advocacy activities.
Progress to Date: Dr. Asplin was promoted to
Department Head of Emergency Medicine in 2003 and has continued to focus on
translating his research agenda into practice through operational changes in
the ED. He launched an operations improvement agenda entitled the BEST ED
project [Building Efficiency, Satisfaction, and Teamwork]. He gives
lectures on ED crowding throughout the U.S. and Canada and continues to serve
on the Institute of Medicine's Committee on the Future of Emergency Care in
the U.S. Health System. Two manuscripts based on research findings
are under review and five have been published.
Highlights and Specific Accomplishments:
-
Served as Primary Investigator on AHRQ Integrated Delivery System Research Network
(IDSRN) Task Order (Developing Data to Monitor
and Reduce Emergency Department (ED) Overcrowding).
-
Served on expert panel on ED
crowding for the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations (JCAHO).
-
Appointed to the National Advisory
Committee for Urgent Matters, a national program to study and reduce ED
crowding by the RWJ Foundation.
-
Appointed to the Institute of Medicine's Committee on the Future of Emergency Care in the United States.
-
Named to America's Health Insurance Plans 2005-2006 Executive Leadership Program for Medical Directors
(ELP-MD).
K-Generated Publications:
Asplin BR, Magid DJ, Rhodes KV, Solberg LI, Lurie N, Camargo CA. A conceptual model of emergency department crowding. Annals of Emergency Medicine 2004. 42:173-80.
Asplin, BR. Show
me the money! Managing access, outcomes, and cost in high-risk populations. Annals of Emergency Medicine 2004. 43(2):174-7.
Kennedy J., Rhodes K., Walls
CA., Asplin BR. Access to emergency care: Restricted by long waiting times
and cost and coverage concerns. Annals of Emergency Medicine 2004.
43(5):567-73.
Solberg LI, Maciosek MV,
Sperl-Hillen JM, Crain AL, Engebretson KI, Asplin BR, O'Connor PJ. Does
improved access to care affect utilization and costs for patients with chronic conditions?
American Journal of Managed Care 2004. 10(10):717-22.
Magid DJ, Asplin BR,
Wears RL. The quality gap: Searching for the consequences of emergency department
crowding. Annals of Emergency Medicine 2004. 44(6):586-88.
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