Department of Cardiology, Ochsner Clinic Foundation, New Orleans, Louisiana; Ochsner Clinical School, University of Queensland School of Medicine, Louisiana.
Department of Cardiology, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York.
Am J Cardiol. 2018 Nov 1;122(9):1570-1573. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2018.07.016. Epub 2018 Aug 3.
A third of healthcare spending in the United States is considered waste, and costs are growing at an unsustainable rate. Reducing unnecessary cardiac telemetry, a costly intervention with a high potential for overuse, may be an opportunity to reduce waste. We performed a review of 250 consecutive patients admitted to telemetry capable beds on the general medical-surgical, noncritical care units. Based on the American Heart Association Practice Standards for Electrocardiographic Monitoring in Hospital Settings, appropriateness of telemetric monitoring during each inpatient day was assessed, with identification of significant new arrhythmias, code calls, and clinical decisions resulting from telemetry. Cost of a telemetry day was calculated using a time-driven activity-based cost model. Patients (63 ± 19 years, 54% male) spent a total of 1,640 days hospitalized, 1,399 (85%) of which were on telemetry. Average length of stay was 6.6 days, and average telemetry time was 5.6 days. Only 334 (24%) telemetry days were deemed appropriate based on Practice Standards. During telemetric monitoring, 16 new significant arrhythmias were detected, 4 code calls were made, and 19 significant clinical decisions were prompted by telemetry. No cardiac code call occurred on a nontelemetry day. The cost of telemetry was calculated as $34.28 more per day than a nontelemetry hospital day. Elimination of inappropriate telemetry days would result in a minimum estimated savings of $37,007 in these 250 patients, and an annual savings of $528,241 overall. Telemetric monitoring is frequently overused. In conclusion, our findings propose that a reduction in inappropriate telemetry days in accordance with the American Heart Association Practice Standards could result in significant cost savings.
美国三分之一的医疗保健支出被认为是浪费,而且成本正以不可持续的速度增长。减少不必要的心脏遥测,这是一种昂贵的干预措施,过度使用的可能性很高,可能是减少浪费的机会。我们对 250 名连续入住具备遥测功能的普通内科-外科、非重症监护病房的患者进行了回顾性研究。根据美国心脏协会(American Heart Association)在医院环境中进行心电图监测的实践标准,评估了每个住院日内进行遥测监测的适宜性,并确定了显著新心律失常、代码调用以及由遥测产生的临床决策。使用时间驱动的作业成本模型计算遥测日的成本。患者(63±19 岁,54%为男性)共住院 1640 天,其中 1399 天(85%)接受遥测监测。平均住院时间为 6.6 天,平均遥测时间为 5.6 天。只有 334 天(24%)的遥测日符合实践标准。在遥测监测期间,检测到 16 例新的显著心律失常,进行了 4 次代码调用,并通过遥测触发了 19 项重要的临床决策。在非遥测日没有发生心脏代码调用。遥测的成本比非遥测的医院日高 34.28 美元。在这 250 名患者中,消除不适当的遥测日将至少节省 37007 美元,每年总计节省 528241 美元。遥测监测经常被过度使用。总之,我们的研究结果表明,根据美国心脏协会的实践标准减少不适当的遥测日可能会带来显著的成本节约。