Objective: We aimed to evaluate the impact of the same-day GPs' strike and terrorist attacks on a call centre's activity. Methods: We compared the number of calls received, the number of patient's medical files (PMFs) created and the number of mobile ICU (MICU) dispatched per hour on Friday, 13 November, to the repository established on the five previous Fridays. As previously published, the variation criterion was set to an activity variation above 20% for more than 2 h. Results: On Friday, 13 November, 1745 calls were received compared with 1455 calls, on average, for the five previous Fridays. The number of calls received increased after the terrorist attacks (500%) in the first hour after the attacks. Conclusion: The GPs' strike and the terrorist attacks did not impact our call centre's activity in the same manner. The strike increased the number of PMFs without increasing the number of calls received. The attacks increased the number of calls received and MICU dispatched without increasing the number of PMFs. Many markers are at the disposal of call centres to evaluate the impact of healthcare events. Copyright (C) 2016 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Academic Emergency Medicine, EarlyView. from Emergency Medicine via xlomafota13 on Inoreader https://ift.tt/2JxJINK
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