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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12439/2830
Title: National Survey of Rapid Access Chest Pain Clinics in Australia.
Northern Health Authors: Benjamin Filipopoulos;William van Gaal
Northern Health affiliation: (Van, Filipopoulos) Department of Cardiology, Northern Health, Epping, VIC, Australia
Authors: Cho K.;Kozor R.;Thiagalingam A.;Biasi A.;Lennox-Bradley W.;Mooney J.;Indraratna P.;Pitney M.;Chetty R.;Ihdayhid A.;Hamilton-Craig C.;French J.;Favretti J.;Thomas A.;Davies A.;Black A.;Zoumberis C.;Al-Fiadh A.;Lowe H.;Kwan T.;Leow K.;Scott P.;Kangaharan N.;Baumann A.;Spiro J.;Kalathil S.;Evans G.;Van G.W.;Filipopoulos B.;Chapman N.;Reid C.;Figtree G.;Hillis G.;Jennings G.;Chow C.
Citation: Heart Lung and Circulation. Conference: 72nd Annual Scientific Meeting of the Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand. Perth Convention and Exhibition Centre, Perth Australia. 33(Supplement 4) (pp S407), 2024. Date of Publication: August 2024.
Issue Date: 1-Aug-2024
Abstract: Background: Rapid access chest-pain clinics (RACC) are an innovative, outpatient pathway for low/intermediate-risk patients. Previous research has only included RACCs with published results, representing an academic subset. We identified and invited all RACCs to join a network and complete a national survey. Method(s): Australian RACCs were identified through four methods 1) systematic literature search; 2) Google Search using terms chest pain clinic with each state/territory, reviewed to 10th page; 3) word-of-mouth; 4) self-identified via the CSANZ emailing list. Result(s): Twenty-four RACCs were identified, located in all states/territories. All public (n=15/15, response rate=100%) and three private (n=3/9, response rate=33%) RACCs completed the survey. Service variations included: clinic days/week (median=3, range=1-7 days), patient volume (median=411.5, range=96-1,674 patients/year), staffing (all RACCs had at least 1 consultant, 13 RACCs had Ats, 10 had nursing staff, 3 BPT/SRMOs, and 3 had PGY1/2s), referral pathways (all accepted ED referrals, additional referrals from GPs in 12 RACCs, in-hospital/other clinics in 9), and use of telehealth (n=13). Median waiting times was 8.5 days (IQR=3.25-18 days), 50% of clinics reviewed >50% of patients within 7 days of referral, and 44% reviewed >=80% within 14 days. The most common initial investigations were stress echocardiography (7 clinics), CTCA (6 clinics), and exercise stress tests (5 clinics). All RACCs were agreeable/potentially agreeable to participate in multicentre studies if ethics and resources permitted. Conclusion(s): Our survey outlines the Australian RACC landscape, and the development of a national network to collaborate in multi-centre studies to improve our understanding of RACC on patient outcomes.Copyright � 2024
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12439/2830
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hlc.2024.06.610
Type: Conference abstract
Keywords: Australia
stress echocardiography
telehealth
thorax pain
Study/Trial: Observational study (cohort, case-control, cross sectional, or survey)
Access Rights: Free article
Place of publication: Netherlands
Conference Name: 72nd Annual Scientific Meeting of the Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand
Conference Location: Perth Convention and Exhibition Centre, Perth, Australia
Appears in Collections:Conference papers, presentations, and posters

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