Bazzoli Gloria J, Clement Jan P, Lindrooth Richard C, Chen Hsueh-Fen, Aydede Sema K, Braun Barbara I, Loeb Jerod M
Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA.
Med Care Res Rev. 2007 Apr;64(2):148-68. doi: 10.1177/1077558706298289.
Financial pressure mounted for hospitals nationwide during the late 1990s. Our study examines how this affected the quality of their operations in terms of organizational infrastructure and processes that support the delivery of care. Our sample consisted of community hospitals operating between 1995 and 2000. Financial pressure was measured based on changes in net patient revenues per adjusted patient day and the ratio of cash flow to total revenues. The authors examined effects on hospital investments in plant and equipment and on hospital standards compliance with selected Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organization performance areas. The results suggest that increasing financial pressures did lead to cutbacks in these areas. These findings suggest the importance of looking broadly across hospital operations to identify factors that may contribute to poor patient outcomes. Given the findings of earlier studies, these results suggest that poor outcomes may in part result from deterioration in supporting infrastructure and organizational processes.
20世纪90年代后期,全国医院面临的财务压力不断增大。我们的研究考察了这是如何在支持医疗服务提供的组织基础设施和流程方面影响医院运营质量的。我们的样本包括1995年至2000年期间运营的社区医院。财务压力是根据每调整后病人日净病人收入的变化以及现金流与总收入的比率来衡量的。作者考察了对医院厂房和设备投资以及医院在选定的医疗组织认证联合委员会绩效领域的标准合规情况的影响。结果表明,不断增加的财务压力确实导致了这些领域的削减。这些发现表明,全面审视医院运营以识别可能导致患者不良预后的因素非常重要。鉴于早期研究的结果,这些结果表明,不良预后可能部分是由于支持性基础设施和组织流程的恶化所致。