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- Title
Appropriateness of referrals to a urogynecology practice.
- Authors
Ju, Rujin; Guanzon, Anna M.; DeWitt, Jacob; Liu, Onying; Heit, Michael H.
- Abstract
Introduction and hypothesis: The urogynecology subspecialty relies on appropriate referrals from their referral base. We sought to provide guidance for optimizing appropriate referrals to urogynecology by comparing pre-referral characteristics between appropriate and inappropriate referrals. Methods: This retrospective cohort study examined predictors of appropriate urogynecology referrals. Appropriateness categorization was based upon pelvic floor disorder (PFD) symptoms and signs provided by the referring provider. Patients with both a PFD symptom and sign were considered "appropriate." Patients with neither a PFD symptom nor sign were considered "inappropriate." PFD symptoms were: vaginal bulge, voiding or defecatory dysfunction. PFD signs were: vaginal vault prolapse, urethral hypermobility, mesh/sling exposure, elevated post-void residual, positive standing stress test, abnormal urinalysis or urine culture-proven infection. Continuous and categorical data were analyzed with ANOVA and chi-square test, respectively. A logistic regression model to predict appropriateness was developed from variables identified from the bivariate analysis. Results: Bivariate predictors of an appropriate referral for 1716 study subjects were older age, prior overactive bladder medication use, MD/DO referrer source and OBGYN, urogynecology or urology referrer specialty. Our logistic regression model correctly classified referrals as appropriate in 93.6% of cases. Conclusions: Age, anti-cholinergic medication use, referrer source and specialty are pre-initial visit predictors of urogynecology referral appropriateness. The predictor-generated model was successful in predicting referral appropriateness. Potential bias from information transfer issues, lack of pre-referral evaluation and referring provider unfamiliarity with urogynecology are possible reasons for inappropriate referrals and potential areas for improvement.
- Subjects
UROGYNECOLOGY; BIVARIATE analysis; MATHEMATICAL category theory; PELVIC floor; CHI-squared test; SYMPTOMS; OVERACTIVE bladder
- Publication
International Urogynecology Journal, 2020, Vol 31, Issue 8, p1675
- ISSN
0937-3462
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1007/s00192-019-04100-x