Villalobos Gámez Juan Luis, González Pérez Cristina, García-Almeida José Manuel, Martínez Reina Alfonso, Del Río Mata José, Márquez Fernández Efrén, Rioja Vázquez Rosalía, Barranco Pérez Joaquín, Enguix Armada Alfredo, Rodríguez García Luis Miguel, Bernal Losada Olga, Osorio Fernández Diego, Mínguez Mañanes Alfredo, Lara Ramos Carlos, Dani Laila, Vallejo Báez Antonio, Martínez Martín Jesús, Fernández Ovies José Manuel, Tinahones Madueño Francisco Javier, Fernández-Crehuet Navajas Joaquín
Nutritional Support Team. Hospital Pharmacy / Nutrition Section. Hospital Clínico Universitario Virgen de la Victoria (Virgen de la Victoria University Hospital). Complejo Hospitalario de Málaga (Hospital Complex of Malaga). Spain..
Hospital Pharmacy / Nutrition Section. Hospital Clínico Universitario Virgen de la Victoria (Virgen de la Victoria University Hospital). Complejo Hospitalario de Málaga (Hospital Complex of Malaga). Spain..
Nutr Hosp. 2014 Jun 1;29(6):1210-23. doi: 10.3305/nh.2014.29.6.7486.
The high prevalence of disease-related hospital malnutrition justifies the need for screening tools and early detection in patients at risk for malnutrition, followed by an assessment targeted towards diagnosis and treatment. At the same time there is clear undercoding of malnutrition diagnoses and the procedures to correct it Objectives: To describe the INFORNUT program/ process and its development as an information system. To quantify performance in its different phases. To cite other tools used as a coding source. To calculate the coding rates for malnutrition diagnoses and related procedures. To show the relationship to Mean Stay, Mortality Rate and Urgent Readmission; as well as to quantify its impact on the hospital Complexity Index and its effect on the justification of Hospitalization Costs.
The INFORNUT® process is based on an automated screening program of systematic detection and early identification of malnourished patients on hospital admission, as well as their assessment, diagnoses, documentation and reporting. Of total readmissions with stays longer than three days incurred in 2008 and 2010, we recorded patients who underwent analytical screening with an alert for a medium or high risk of malnutrition, as well as the subgroup of patients in whom we were able to administer the complete INFORNUT® process, generating a report for each. Other documentary coding sources are cited. From the Minimum Basic Data Set, codes defined in the SEDOMSENPE consensus were analyzed. The data were processed with the Alcor-DRG program. Rates in ‰ of discharges for 2009 and 2010 of diagnoses of malnutrition, procedure and procedures-related diagnoses were calculated. These rates were compared with the mean rates in Andalusia. The contribution of these codes to the Complexity Index was estimated and, from the cost accounting data, the fraction of the hospitalization cost seen as justified by this activity was estimated.
RESULTS are summarized for both study years. With respect to process performance, more than 3,600 patients per year (30% of admissions with a stay > 3 days) underwent analytical screening. Half of these patients were at medium or high risk and a nutritional assessment using INFORNUT® was completed for 55% of them, generating approximately 1,000 reports/year. Our coding rates exceeded the mean rates in Andalusia, being 3.5 times higher for diagnoses (35‰); 2.5 times higher for procedures (50‰) and five times the rate of procedurerelated diagnoses in the same patient (25‰). The Mean Stay of patients coded with malnutrition at discharge was 31.7 days, compared to 9.5 for the overall hospital stay. The Mortality Rate for the same patients (21.8%) was almost five times higher than the mean and Urgent Readmissions (5.5%) were 1.9 times higher. The impact of this coding on the hospital Complexity Index was four hundredths (from 2.08 to 2.12 in 2009 and 2.15 to 2.19 in 2010). This translates into a hospitalization cost justification of 2,000,000; five to six times the cost of artificial nutrition.
The process facilitated access to the diagnosis of malnutrition and to understanding the risk of developing it, as well as to the prescription of procedures and/or supplements to correct it. The interdisciplinary team coordination, the participatory process and the tools used improved coding rates to give results far above the Andalusian mean. These results help to upwardly adjust the hospital Complexity Index or Case Mix-, as well as to explain hospitalization costs.
与疾病相关的医院营养不良发生率很高,这证明有必要使用筛查工具对营养不良风险患者进行早期检测,随后进行针对性诊断和治疗的评估。与此同时,营养不良诊断的编码明显不足以及纠正该问题的程序。目标:描述INFORNUT计划/流程及其作为信息系统的发展情况。量化其不同阶段的表现。列举用作编码来源的其他工具。计算营养不良诊断及相关程序的编码率。展示与平均住院时间、死亡率和紧急再入院率的关系;以及量化其对医院复杂性指数的影响及其对住院费用合理性的影响。
INFORNUT®流程基于一个自动筛查程序,用于在患者入院时系统检测和早期识别营养不良患者,以及对其进行评估、诊断、记录和报告。在2008年和2010年住院时间超过三天的再次入院患者中,我们记录了接受分析筛查且有中度或高度营养不良风险警报的患者,以及我们能够对其实施完整INFORNUT®流程的患者亚组,并为每个患者生成一份报告。列举了其他文件编码来源。从最低基本数据集分析了在SEDOMSENPE共识中定义的代码。使用Alcor-DRG程序处理数据。计算了2009年和2010年营养不良诊断、程序及与程序相关诊断的出院率(‰)。将这些率与安达卢西亚的平均率进行比较。估计这些代码对复杂性指数的贡献,并根据成本核算数据估计该活动视为合理的住院费用比例。
总结了两个研究年份的结果。关于流程表现,每年有超过3600名患者(住院时间>3天的入院患者的30%)接受分析筛查。其中一半患者处于中度或高度风险,并且对其中55%的患者使用INFORNUT®完成了营养评估,每年生成约1000份报告。我们的编码率超过了安达卢西亚的平均率,诊断编码率高3.5倍(35‰);程序编码率高2.5倍(50‰),同一患者中与程序相关诊断的编码率高5倍(25‰)。出院时编码为营养不良的患者的平均住院时间为31.7天,而全院平均住院时间为9.5天。这些患者的死亡率(21.8%)几乎比平均水平高五倍,紧急再入院率(5.5%)高1.9倍。这种编码对医院复杂性指数的影响为百分之四(2009年从2.08提高到2.12,2010年从2.15提高到2.19)。这转化为200万欧元的住院费用合理性;是人工营养成本的五到六倍。
该流程有助于实现营养不良的诊断,了解其发生风险,以及开具纠正程序和/或补充剂的处方。跨学科团队协作、参与式流程和使用的工具提高了编码率,使其结果远高于安达卢西亚平均水平。这些结果有助于向上调整医院复杂性指数或病例组合,以及解释住院费用。