<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><Articles><Article><id>259</id><JournalTitle>RELATIONAL COORDINATION AND ITS INFLUENCE ON
CLINICAL OUTCOMES IN EMERGENCY GENERAL SURGERY
TRANSFERS</JournalTitle><Abstract>Reliable access to emergency general surgery (EGS) is now largely based on efficient transfer of patients, because many rural
hospitals lack trained surgeons. We studied how patient transfers among hospitals in the EGS program affect the results of
these transfers. We carried out our study using data from hospital discharges between 2016 and 2018 which involved 150
hospitals and 3,197 patients with direct carotid stent procedures. Our theory was that improved outcomes for patients in
intensive care such as reduced death, complications and days in hospital, would be more likely when there were greater
numbers of patients shared between hospitals. In total, 35.3% of patients received bad news, including death (3.8%),
complications (24.7%) or continued hospitalization (18.7%). Most patients who did not do well after surgery were older, had
more illnesses and generally lacked private insurance. Multivariable logistic regression found that greater age in the patient,
being assigned male at birth, having multiple disorders and surgical intervention all significantly increased the risk of adverse
outcomes. On the other hand, greater patient sharing between hospitals was related to an 15% decrease in the overall odds of
adverse events (OR 0.85; 95% CI 0.78–0.92, p<0.001). Patient results were not closely related to hospital bed size or receipt of
Disproptionate Share Hospital funds. They demonstrate that shared transfer relationships between hospitals play a key role in
making emergency surgical care transfers safer and of better quality. Although previous research aims to refer patients to
hospitals that do best, our outcomes show that sticking with well-established transfer paths reduces the chances of running into
difficulties. These networks depend in large part on the relational coordination framework and its emphasis on efficient
collaboration. The research points out that moving patients across healthcare facilities is complex and requires reliable
protocols, especially where there aren’t many doctors to call on</Abstract><Email>]]></Email><articletype><![CDATA[Research</articletype><volume>3</volume><issue>2</issue><year>2013</year><keyword> Relational Coordination, Emergency General Surgery (EGS), Interhospital Transfers, Patient Outcomes, Care Coordination</keyword><AUTHORS>Dr. Gupta M.V.S.N</AUTHORS><afflication>Assistant Professor, Department of General Surgery, Prathima Relief Institute of Medical Sciences, Nagunur, Karimnagar, Telangana, India</afflication></Article></Articles>