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Excessively long hospital stays after trauma are not related to the severity of illness: let's aim to the right target! JAMA Surg 2013 Oct;148(10):956-61

Date

08/24/2013

Pubmed ID

23965602

DOI

10.1001/jamasurg.2013.2148

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84886422999 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   87 Citations

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Reduction in length of hospital stay is a veritable target in reducing the overall costs of health care. However, many existing approaches are flawed because the assumptions of what cause excessive length of stay are incorrect; we methodically identified the right targets in this study.

OBJECTIVE: To identify the causes of excessively prolonged hospitalization (ExProH) in trauma patients.

DESIGN: The trauma registry, billing databases, and medical records of trauma admissions were reviewed. Excessively prolonged hospitalization was defined by the standard method used by insurers, which is a hospital stay that exceeds the Diagnosis Related Group-based trim point. The causes of ExProH were explored in a unique potentially avoidable days database, used by our hospital's case managers to track discharge delays.

SETTING: Level I academic trauma center.

PARTICIPANTS: Adult trauma patients admitted between January 1, 2006, and December 31, 2010.

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Excessively prolonged hospitalization and hospital cost.

RESULTS: Of 3237 patients, 155 (5%) had ExProH. The patients with ExProH compared with non-ExProH patients were older (mean [SD] age, 53 [21] vs 47 [22] years, respectively; P = .001), were more likely to have blunt trauma (92% vs 84%, respectively; P = .03), were more likely to be self-payers (16% vs 11%, respectively; P = .02) or covered by Medicare/Medicaid (41% vs 30%, respectively; P = .002), were more likely to be discharged to post-acute care facilities than home (65% vs 35%, respectively; P < .001), and had higher hospitalization cost (mean, $54 646 vs $18 444, respectively; P < .001). Both groups had similar Injury Severity Scores, Revised Trauma Scores, baseline comorbidities, and in-hospital complication rates. Independent predictors of mortality were discharge to a rehabilitation facility (odds ratio = 4.66; 95% CI, 2.71-8.00; P < .001) or other post-acute care facility (odds ratio = 5.04; 95% CI, 2.52-10.05; P < .001) as well as insurance type that was Medicare/Medicaid (odds ratio = 1.70; 95% CI, 1.06-2.72; P = .03) or self-pay (odds ratio = 2.43; 95% CI, 1.35-4.37; P = .003). The reasons for discharge delays were clinical in only 20% of the cases. The remaining discharges were excessively delayed because of difficulties in rehabilitation facility placement (47%), in-hospital operational delays (26%), or payer-related issues (7%).

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: System-related issues, not severity of illness, prolong hospital stay excessively. Cost-reduction efforts should target operational bottlenecks between acute and postacute care.

Author List

Hwabejire JO, Kaafarani HM, Imam AM, Solis CV, Verge J, Sullivan NM, DeMoya MA, Alam HB, Velmahos GC

Author

Marc Anthony De Moya MD Chief, Professor in the Surgery department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Diagnosis-Related Groups
Efficiency, Organizational
Female
Hospital Costs
Hospital Mortality
Humans
Injury Severity Score
Insurance, Health
Length of Stay
Male
Massachusetts
Middle Aged
Registries
Risk Factors
Trauma Centers
Wounds and Injuries