Lucas Brian P, Kumapley Rudolf, Mba Benjamin, Nisar Imran, Lee Kuenok, Ofori-Ntow Samuel, Borkowsky Shane, Asmar Abdo, Lewis Trevor, Bienias Julia L
Division of Hospital Medicine, Department of Medicine, Stroger Hospital of Cook County and Rush Medical College, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
J Hosp Med. 2009 May;4(5):276-84. doi: 10.1002/jhm.386.
Short-stay units (SSUs) provide an alternative to traditional inpatient services for patients with short anticipated hospital stays. Yet little is known about which patient types predict SSU success.
To describe patients admitted to our hospitalist-run SSU and explore predictors of length-of-stay (LOS) and eventual admission to traditional inpatient services.
Prospective observational cohort study.
Large public teaching hospital.
Consecutive admissions (n = 755) to the SSU over 4 months.
Hospitalist attending physicians prospectively collected data from patients' histories, physical exams, and medical records upon admission and discharge.
Risk assessments were made for patients with our most common provisional diagnoses: possible acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and heart failure. Patient stays were considered successful when LOS was less than 72 hours and eventual admission to traditional inpatient services was not required.
Of 738 eligible patients, 79% (n = 582) had successful SSU stays. In a multivariable model, the provisional diagnosis of heart failure predicted stays longer than 72 hours (P = 0.007) but risk assessments were unimportant. Patients who received specialty consultations were most likely to need eventual admission (odds ratio [OR], 13.1; 95% confidence interval [CI], 6.9-24.9), and the likelihood of long stays was inversely proportional to the accessibility of diagnostic tests.
In our hospitalist-run SSU, the inaccessibility of diagnostic tests and the need for specialty consultations were the most important predictors of unsuccessful stays. Designs for other SSUs that care for mostly low-risk patients should focus on matching patients' diagnostic and consultative needs with readily accessible services.
短期住院单元(SSU)为预期住院时间较短的患者提供了一种替代传统住院服务的选择。然而,对于哪些患者类型预示着SSU的成功知之甚少。
描述入住我院由住院医师管理的SSU的患者,并探讨住院时间(LOS)和最终转入传统住院服务的预测因素。
前瞻性观察队列研究。
大型公立教学医院。
4个月内连续入住SSU的患者(n = 755)。
住院医师主治医师在患者入院和出院时前瞻性地收集患者病史、体格检查和病历数据。
对最常见初步诊断的患者进行风险评估:可能的急性冠状动脉综合征(ACS)和心力衰竭。当LOS小于72小时且无需最终转入传统住院服务时,患者住院被视为成功。
在738例符合条件的患者中,79%(n = 582)的SSU住院成功。在多变量模型中,心力衰竭的初步诊断预示住院时间超过72小时(P = 0.007),但风险评估并不重要。接受专科会诊的患者最有可能需要最终转入传统住院服务(优势比[OR],13.1;95%置信区间[CI],6.9 - 24.9),长时间住院的可能性与诊断检查的可及性成反比。
在我院由住院医师管理的SSU中,诊断检查的不可及性和专科会诊的需求是住院不成功的最重要预测因素。其他主要照顾低风险患者的SSU设计应侧重于将患者的诊断和会诊需求与易于获得的服务相匹配。