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Journal Article

Citation

Marshall R, Rainer T. J. Accid. Emerg. Med. 1996; 13(6): 402-405.

Affiliation

Department of Accident and Emergency Medicine, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, United Kingdom.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1996, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8947799

PMCID

PMC1342809

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the workload generated by police inquiries to an accident and emergency (A&E) department and the adherence of medical staff to departmental guidelines relating to these inquiries. DESIGN: Prospective analysis of the number, nature, and timing of police inquiries and the information released by medical staff. SETTING: A&E department of an inner city teaching hospital. OUTCOME MEASURES: Number of personal and telephone requests for information from police; completion of a form of inquiry; record of patient consent for release of information. RESULTS: A daily average of 8.7 police inquiries were made, but in only 10% of cases was a form of inquiry completed. The patient's consent for release of information to the police was recorded in 4% of cases. CONCLUSIONS: Police inquiries generate a significant workload for an A&E department, often at clinically busy times. Medical staff need further education to ensure that patient confidentiality is respected while assisting the police with their investigations.


Language: en

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