McManus Michael L, Long Michael C, Cooper Abbot, Mandell James, Berwick Donald M, Pagano Marcello, Litvak Eugene
Department of Anesthesia and the Multidisciplinary Intensive Care Unit, Children's Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Anesthesiology. 2003 Jun;98(6):1491-6. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200306000-00029.
Variability in the demand for any service is a significant barrier to efficient distribution of limited resources. In health care, demand is often highly variable and access may be limited when peaks cannot be accommodated in a downsized care delivery system. Intensive care units may frequently present bottlenecks to patient flow, and saturation of these services limits a hospital's responsiveness to new emergencies.
Over a 1-yr period, information was collected prospectively on all requests for admission to the intensive care unit of a large, urban children's hospital. Data included the nature of each request, as well as each patient's final disposition. The daily variability of requests was then analyzed and related to the unit's ability to accommodate new admissions.
Day-to-day demand for intensive care services was extremely variable. This variability was particularly high among patients undergoing scheduled surgical procedures, with variability of scheduled admissions exceeding that of emergencies. Peaks of demand were associated with diversion of patients both within the hospital (to off-service care sites) and to other institutions (ambulance diversions). Although emergency requests for admission outnumbered scheduled requests, diversion from the intensive care unit was better correlated with scheduled caseload (r = 0.542, P < 0.001) than with unscheduled volume (r = 0.255, P < 0.001). During the busiest periods, nearly 70% of all diversions were associated with variability in the scheduled caseload.
Variability in scheduled surgical caseload represents a potentially reducible source of stress on intensive care units in hospitals and throughout the healthcare delivery system generally. When uncontrolled, variability limits access to care and impairs overall responsiveness to emergencies.
任何服务需求的变化都是有效分配有限资源的重大障碍。在医疗保健领域,需求往往高度可变,当缩减规模的医疗服务系统无法应对需求高峰时,就医机会可能会受到限制。重症监护病房可能经常成为患者流动的瓶颈,这些服务的饱和限制了医院对新紧急情况的应对能力。
在1年的时间里,前瞻性收集了一家大型城市儿童医院重症监护病房所有入院申请的信息。数据包括每个申请的性质以及每个患者的最终处置情况。然后分析了申请的每日变化情况,并将其与该科室接收新入院患者的能力相关联。
重症监护服务的每日需求变化极大。这种变化在接受择期手术的患者中尤为明显,择期入院的变化超过了急诊入院。需求高峰与医院内部患者转至非服务科室以及转至其他机构(救护车转运)相关。虽然急诊入院申请数量超过择期申请,但重症监护病房的转出与择期病例量的相关性更好(r = 0.542,P < 0.001),而非与非计划量的相关性(r = 0.255,P < 0.001)。在最繁忙时期,近70%的转出与择期病例量的变化有关。
择期手术病例量的变化是医院重症监护病房乃至整个医疗服务系统潜在的可减轻压力的来源。如果不加控制,这种变化会限制就医机会,并削弱对紧急情况的总体应对能力。