Acute medicine in a general practitioner hospital.
- 1 April 1982
- journal article
- Vol. 32 (237) , 245-7
Abstract
Admissions during 1980 to a hospital staffed by general practitioners are analysed. Almost all (94 per cent) were acute admissions. The mean length of stay was 11.7 days and the mean age of the patients 63.3 years, with 40 per cent of them under 65 years of age. Two thirds of the patients were discharged to their homes and only 7 per cent of patients spent more than four weeks in hospital. General practitioner hospitals have medical, social and economic advantages over large district hospitals for certain acutely ill patients and have an important role in primary medical care.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- One practice's review of its use of a general practitioner hospital.1980
- Contribution of general practitioner hospitals in England and Wales.BMJ, 1978
- Acute admissions to medical beds.1972
- Contribution of a General-practitioner HospitalBMJ, 1971
- NEW USE FOR THE SMALLER PERIPHERAL GENERAL HOSPITALThe Lancet, 1969
- The Hazards of HospitalizationSouthern Medical Journal, 1967