Gupta Shiraz R, Wojtynek Jeffrey E, Walton Surrey M, Botticelli Joseph T, Shields Karen L, Quad Juliana E, Schumock Glen T
Center for Pharmacoeconomic Research and Department of Pharmacy Practice, College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) 60612, and Saint Clare's Hospital, Denville, NJ, USA.
Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2007 May 1;64(9):937-44. doi: 10.2146/ajhp060228.
The purposes of this study were to characterize and quantify workload and productivity in hospitals according to their size, to establish comparative statistics useful for pharmacy administrators as a means to contrast their efficiency to that of other hospitals of similar sizes, and to provide data to enable policymakers to better assess staffing and resource needs.
A 50-item Web-based survey designed to illicit information about pharmacy department staffing, workload, and productivity was sent electronically to 242 members of Consorta, Inc., a group-purchasing organization. Responses were received from 110 organizations, a response rate of 45.5%. The responses were categorized into three groups according to the number of staffed beds and were profiled and compared using descriptive and inferential statistics.
Pharmacy department workload and expenditures were primarily a function of hospital size: Hospital volume statistics, pharmacy expenditures, hours of operation, pharmacy full-time equivalents (FTEs), and dispensing workload all are highly dependent on the size of the facility. The range of clinical services provided by small, medium, and large hospitals did not differ with the exception of a few services provided more often in larger hospitals. Overall productivity ratios demonstrated greater efficiency among larger hospitals. In terms of costs, pharmacy and hospital expenditures per occupied bed and per admission generally decreased as hospital size increased.
Results of a survey suggested consistency in clinical services provided by hospitals of varying size and increased productivity with increasing hospital size. Respondents employed fewer FTEs than those in other national surveys.
本研究的目的是根据医院规模对其工作量和生产率进行特征描述和量化,建立对药房管理人员有用的比较统计数据,以便将他们的效率与其他规模相似的医院进行对比,并提供数据使政策制定者能够更好地评估人员配备和资源需求。
一项基于网络的包含50个条目的调查问卷被电子发送给联合采购组织Consorta公司的242名成员,旨在获取有关药房部门人员配备、工作量和生产率的信息。收到了110个组织的回复,回复率为45.5%。根据配备床位数量将回复分为三组,并使用描述性和推断性统计进行分析和比较。
药房部门的工作量和支出主要取决于医院规模:医院业务量统计、药房支出、运营时间、药房全职等效人员(FTE)和配药工作量都高度依赖于机构规模。除了一些在大型医院更常提供的服务外,小型、中型和大型医院提供的临床服务范围没有差异。总体生产率比率表明大型医院效率更高。在成本方面,每张占用床位和每次住院的药房及医院支出通常随着医院规模的增加而降低。
一项调查结果表明,不同规模医院提供的临床服务具有一致性,且随着医院规模的增加生产率提高。与其他全国性调查相比,受访者雇佣的全职等效人员更少。