Rathlev Niels K, Chessare John, Olshaker Jonathan, Obendorfer Dan, Mehta Supriya D, Rothenhaus Todd, Crespo Steven, Magauran Brendan, Davidson Kathy, Shemin Richard, Lewis Keith, Becker James M, Fisher Linda, Guy Linda, Cooper Abbott, Litvak Eugene
Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston Medical Center, One Boston Medical Center Place, Boston, MA 02118, USA.
Ann Emerg Med. 2007 Mar;49(3):265-71. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2006.11.007. Epub 2007 Jan 16.
We measure the effect of various input, throughput, and output factors on daily emergency department (ED) mean length of stay per patient (daily mean length of stay).
The study was a retrospective review of 93,274 ED visits between April 15, 2002, and December 31, 2003. The association between the daily mean length of stay and the independent variables was assessed with autoregressive moving average time series analysis (ARIMA). The following independent variables were measured per 24-hour period: number of elective surgical admissions, ED volume, number of ED admissions, number of ED ICU admissions, number of ED clinical attending hours, hospital medical-surgical occupancy (hospital occupancy), and day of the week.
Three factors were independently associated with daily mean length of stay in time series analysis: number of elective surgical admissions, number of ED admissions, and hospital occupancy. The daily mean length of stay increased by 0.21 minutes for every additional elective surgical admission, 2.2 minutes for every additional admission, and 4.1 minutes for every 5% increase in hospital occupancy. Elective surgical admissions were associated with a maximum of 35 hours of additional ED dwell time. The model accounted for 31.5% of the variability in daily mean length of stay. The final model parameters for the ARIMA analysis were autoregressive term (1) moving average (1).
Hospital occupancy and the number of ED admissions are associated with daily mean length of stay. Every additional elective surgical admission prolonged the daily mean length of stay by 0.21 minutes per ED patient. Autocorrelation exists between the daily mean length of stay of the current day and the previous day.
我们测量了各种输入、吞吐量和输出因素对急诊科(ED)每位患者每日平均住院时间(每日平均住院时间)的影响。
该研究是对2002年4月15日至2003年12月31日期间93274次急诊科就诊的回顾性分析。采用自回归移动平均时间序列分析(ARIMA)评估每日平均住院时间与自变量之间的关联。每24小时测量以下自变量:择期手术入院人数、急诊科就诊量、急诊科入院人数、急诊科重症监护病房入院人数、急诊科临床出诊小时数、医院内科-外科占用率(医院占用率)以及星期几。
在时间序列分析中,有三个因素与每日平均住院时间独立相关:择期手术入院人数、急诊科入院人数和医院占用率。每增加一例择期手术入院,每日平均住院时间增加0.21分钟;每增加一例入院,增加2.2分钟;医院占用率每增加5%,增加4.1分钟。择期手术入院最多与额外35小时的急诊科停留时间相关。该模型解释了每日平均住院时间变异性的31.5%。ARIMA分析的最终模型参数为自回归项(1)移动平均(1)。
医院占用率和急诊科入院人数与每日平均住院时间相关。每增加一例择期手术入院,每位急诊科患者的每日平均住院时间延长0.21分钟。当日的每日平均住院时间与前一日之间存在自相关性。