The Association Between Limited English Proficiency and Unplanned Emergency Department Revisit Within 72 Hours

scientific article published on 29 March 2016

The Association Between Limited English Proficiency and Unplanned Emergency Department Revisit Within 72 Hours is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1016/J.ANNEMERGMED.2016.02.042
P932PMC publication ID4958500
P698PubMed publication ID27033142

P50authorCorita R GrudzenQ38327857
P2093author name stringRoy Lee
Ka Ming Ngai
Lynne D Richardson
Alicia Fernandez
Vicky Y Tong
P2860cites workValidating Health Information Exchange (HIE) Data For Quality Measurement Across Four HospitalsQ28648044
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Effect of language barriers on follow-up appointments after an emergency department visitQ33888772
Language barriers, physician-patient language concordance, and glycemic control among insured Latinos with diabetes: the Diabetes Study of Northern California (DISTANCE)Q34482575
Impact of interpreter services on delivery of health care to limited-English-proficient patientsQ34744019
Does a video-interpreting network improve delivery of care in the emergency department?Q36085486
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Language barriers among patients in Boston emergency departments: use of medical interpreters after passage of interpreter legislationQ36311853
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Getting by: underuse of interpreters by resident physiciansQ37067766
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Language interpreter utilization in the emergency department setting: a clinical reviewQ37158965
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The association between language proficiency and outcomes of elderly patients with asthmaQ44615481
Are diagnostic testing and admission rates higher in non-English-speaking versus English-speaking patients in the emergency department?Q45101262
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Criterion for the simultaneous selection of a working correlation structure and either generalized estimating equations or the quadratic inference function approach.Q51123065
Akaike's information criterion in generalized estimating equations.Q52066951
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Pay Now Or Pay Later: Providing Interpreter Services In Health CareQ56688985
Professional Interpreters and Bilingual Physicians in a Pediatric Emergency DepartmentQ56688986
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Defining Frequent Use: The Numbers No Longer CountQ57750079
English proficiency and language preference: testing the equivalence of two measuresQ60784878
Trained medical interpreters in the emergency department: effects on services, subsequent charges, and follow-upQ61463336
Return visits to the emergency departmentQ69425605
Emergency department revisitsQ69690150
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Does a physician-patient language difference increase the probability of hospital admission?Q74096856
Language barriers and resource utilization in a pediatric emergency departmentQ77828500
The effect of limited English proficiency on admission rates from a pediatric ED: stratification by triage acuityQ81309200
Unscheduled return visits to the emergency department: the impact of languageQ86629138
P433issue2
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P304page(s)213-221
P577publication date2016-03-29
P1433published inAnnals of Emergency MedicineQ4767847
P1476titleThe Association Between Limited English Proficiency and Unplanned Emergency Department Revisit Within 72 Hours
P478volume68

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q64107003A Reversed Trend: Care for Limited English Proficiency Patients in the Pediatric Emergency Department
Q61445284Language assistance for limited English proficiency patients in a public ED: determining the unmet need
Q91623764Large observational study on risks predicting emergency department return visits and associated disposition deviations
Q58781909Seventy-two-hour emergency department revisits among adults with chronic diseases: a Saudi Arabian study
Q39176866Shared Decision Making With Vulnerable Populations in the Emergency Department
Q33666851Short Term Unscheduled Revisits to Paediatric Emergency Department - A Six Year Data
Q93157607Socio-demographic and disease related characteristics associated with unplanned emergency department visits by cancer patients: a retrospective cohort study

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