In reply: We thank Considine and colleagues for their interest in our recent article. Our research documented a relationship between the reported urgency mix of patients in emergency departments and waiting time performance, and we discussed possible explanations for the relationship, including “undertriaging”.1 We were explicit that the study did not provide evidence of undertriaging, but argued that it was a possibility worthy of consideration, since gaming of hospital performance indicators has been documented in Australia and overseas.
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- 1. Greene J, Hall J. The comparability of emergency department waiting time performance data. Med J Aust 2012; 197: 345-348. <MJA full text>
- 2. Curtis AJ, Stoelwinder JU, McNeil JJ. Management of waiting lists needs sound data. Med J Aust 2009; 191: 423-424. <MJA full text>
- 3. Paxton Partners. Elective surgery waiting list audit, Royal Women’s Hospital. Melbourne: Department of Human Services, 2009. http://www.health.vic.gov.au/hdss/esis/2009-10/waitinglistaudit_rwh290309.pdf (accessed Oct 2012).
- 4. British Medical Association. BMA survey of A&E waiting times. London: Health Policy and Economic Research Unit, BMA, 2005. http://www.collemergencymed.ac.uk/code/document.asp?ID=3156 (accessed Oct 2012).
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