Alternatives to conventional hospitalization for improving lack of access to inpatient beds: a 12-year cross-sectional analysis
Author
Corbella Virós, Xavier
Ortiga Fontgivell, Berta
Juan, Antoni
Ortega, Nuria
Gomez-Vaquero, Carmen
Capdevila, Cristina
Bardes, Ignasi
Alonso, Gilberto
Ferre, Carles
Soler, Maria
Mañez, Rafael
Jaurrieta, Eduardo
Pujol, Ramón
Salazar Soler, Albert
Publication date
2013-12-17ISSN
1927-6990
Abstract
Background/Objective: When hospitals cannot guarantee available hospital beds for inpatient admission, patients are exposed to prolonged waits, cancellations and diversions that negatively affect their safety and quality of care. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of a multifaceted intervention for eliminating inpatient access delays. Methods: By using multi-time point cross-sectional analysis, data from all hospitalizations from adult patients registered at an 850-bed public, tertiary-care university hospital were compared from March 1998 to March 2000 (control period) with data from April 2000 to March 2010 (intervention period), after a set of 15 actions for avoiding unnecessary inpatient admissions and to reduce length of hospital stay was implemented by a clinician-administrator taskforce. Response variable was the daily average of “boarded” patients waiting for a hospital bed at 8:00 am in the emergency department (ED). Other measurements included daily contextual and performance hospital variables captured automatically by computer-assisted processes. Results: Between March 1998 and March 2010, 348,960 consecutive hospitalizations were registered. Despite daily ED visits increasing from 288 (IQR Q1-Q3: 270-309) to 335 patients (IQR Q1-Q3: 306-359; P<.01), multifaceted intervention reduced the daily emergency “boarded” patients from 7 (IQR Q1-Q3: 3-14) to 3 patients (IQR Q1-Q3: 1-6; P<.01), and length of hospital stay from 10.9 (IQR Q1-Q3: 9.6-12.5) to 8.1 days (IQR Q1-Q3: 6.8-9.8; P<.01), while increasing daily scheduled admissions from 32 (IQR Q1-Q3: 17-58) to 63 patients (IQR Q1-Q3: 13-90; P<.01). Conclusion: Major changes in hospital procedures for bridging the gap between inpatient and outpatient care by implementing alternatives to conventional hospitalization solved the “inpatient boarding” phenomenon in the ED.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Accepted version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
61 - Medical sciences
Keywords
Emergències mèdiques
Assistència hospitalària
Supressió de barreres arquitectòniques
Asistencia médica ambulatoria
Accesibilidad para personas con discapacidad
Emergency currency
Hospital admitting clerks
Inpatients
Outpatient Clinics, Hospital
Pages
13
Publisher
Sciedu Press
Collection
2; 2
Is part of
Journal of Hospital Administration
Citation
Corbella, Xavier; Ortiga, Berta; Juan, Antoni; Ortega, Nuria; Gomez-Vaquero, Carmen; Capdevila, Cristina; Bardes, Ignasi; Alonso, Gilberto; Ferre, Carles; Soler, Maria; Mañez, Rafael; Jaurrieta, Eduardo; Pujol, Ramon; Salazar, Albert. Alternatives to conventional hospitalization for improving lack of access to inpatient beds: a 12-year cross-sectional analysis. Journal of Hospital Administration, 2013, vol. 2, núm. 2, p. 9-21. Disponible en: <http://www.sciedu.ca/journal/index.php/jha/article/view/1800>. Fecha de acceso: 24 nom. 2019. DOI: 10.5430/jha.v2n2p9
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Ciències de la Salut [740]
Rights
All articles published are open-access articles distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license 3.0.