Department of Emergency Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA.
Acad Emerg Med. 2019 Jan;26(1):31-40. doi: 10.1111/acem.13452. Epub 2018 Jun 11.
Outpatients receive observation services to determine the need for inpatient admission. These services are usually provided without the use of condition-specific protocols and in an unstructured manner, scattered throughout a hospital in areas typically designated for inpatient care. Emergency department observation units (EDOUs) use protocolized care to offer an efficient alternative with shorter lengths of stay, lower costs, and higher patient satisfaction. EDOU growth is limited by existing policy barriers that prevent a "two-service" model of separate professional billing for both emergency and observation services. The majority of EDOUs use the "one-service" model, where a single composite professional fee is billed for both emergency and observation services. The financial implications of these models are not well understood.
We created a Monte Carlo simulation by building a model that reflects current clinical practice in the United States and uses inputs gathered from the most recently available peer-reviewed literature, national survey, and payer data. Using this simulation, we modeled annual staffing costs and payments for professional services under two common models of care in an EDOU. We also modeled cash flows over a continuous range of daily EDOU patient encounters to illustrate the dynamic relationship between costs and revenue over various staffing levels.
We estimate the mean (±SD) annual net cash flow to be a net loss of $315,382 (±$89,635) in the one-service model and a net profit of $37,569 (±$359,583) in the two-service model. The two-service model is financially sustainable at daily billable encounters above 20, while in the one-service model, costs exceed revenue regardless of encounter count. Physician cost per hour and daily patient encounters had the most significant impact on model estimates.
In the one-service model, EDOU staffing costs exceed payments at all levels of patient encounters, making a hospital subsidy necessary to create a financially sustainable practice. Professional groups seeking to staff and bill for both emergency and observation services are seldom able to do so due to EDOU size limitations and the regulatory hurdles that require setting up a separate professional group for each service. Policymakers and health care leaders should encourage universal adoption of EDOUs by removing restrictions and allowing the two-service model to be the standard billing option. These findings may inform planning and policy regarding observation services.
门诊患者接受观察服务,以确定是否需要住院治疗。这些服务通常在没有使用特定于病情的方案的情况下以非结构化的方式提供,分布在医院中通常用于住院患者护理的区域。急诊观察病房(EDOU)使用方案化护理,提供一种更有效的替代方案,具有更短的住院时间、更低的成本和更高的患者满意度。EDOU 的增长受到现有政策障碍的限制,这些障碍阻止了为急诊和观察服务分别提供专业计费的“双服务”模式。大多数 EDOU 使用“单服务”模式,即对急诊和观察服务收取单一的综合专业费用。这些模式的财务影响尚不清楚。
我们通过构建一个反映美国当前临床实践并使用最新可用同行评审文献、全国调查和支付方数据收集的输入的蒙特卡罗模拟来创建模型。使用该模拟,我们对 EDOU 中的两种常见护理模式下的年度人员配备成本和专业服务支付进行了建模。我们还对 EDOU 每日患者就诊的连续范围内的现金流量进行了建模,以说明在各种人员配备水平下成本和收入之间的动态关系。
我们估计,在单服务模式下,每年的平均(±SD)净现金流量为净亏损 315382 美元(±89635 美元),而在双服务模式下为净盈利 37569 美元(±359583 美元)。在每日可计费就诊量超过 20 次的情况下,双服务模式具有财务可持续性,而在单服务模式下,无论就诊次数如何,成本均超过收入。医师每小时成本和每日患者就诊量对模型估计的影响最大。
在单服务模式下,EDOU 的人员配备成本在所有患者就诊水平上均超过了支付,这使得医院需要提供补贴才能创建财务可持续的实践。专业团体试图同时为急诊和观察服务配备人员并计费,但由于 EDOU 的规模限制以及要求为每项服务设立单独的专业团体的监管障碍,很少能够做到这一点。政策制定者和医疗保健领导者应鼓励通过取消限制并允许“双服务”模式成为标准计费选项,普遍采用 EDOU。这些发现可能会为观察服务的规划和政策提供信息。