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Biostatistics Collaboration Center, Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
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Madeleine
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Ma
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MS

Hospital Admission Service Structure

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Association of hospital admission service structure with early transfer to critical care, hospital readmission, and length of stay

Hospital admission represents a time period during which patients are at risk for poor clinical outcomes. Although some risk is directly generated by illness pathophysiology, some additive risk is generated by the emergency department (ED)inpatient service handover inherent in the admission process.[1] Increased risk of suboptimal outcomes can result from ED overcrowding, which has been associated with increased mortality, difficulty in patient disposition, and delays in provision of care.[2] Inpatient bed occupancy, as well as availability and organization of accepting inpatient service healthcare staff, can affect ED overcrowding as well.[3, 4]

The overwhelming majority of hospitalist groups accept a significant portion of their admissions via the ED.[5] Hospitalist services must balance their daily group workload between ongoing care and discharge of inpatients and the activity of admitting new patients to their service. Two major models of admission processing exist for hospitalist groups to accomplish these competing tasks. One model, called the general model, employs the use of individual hospitalists to simultaneously perform admission activity as well as ongoing ward‐based care for inpatients during their workday. In the general model, a hospitalist who admits patients on their first hospital day will generally continue to see them on their second hospital day. The other model, called the admitter‐rounder model, divides the hospitalist daily group workflow between hospitalists who are assigned to perform only admission activity (admitters), and hospitalists who are assigned to perform only ongoing care for patients who are already admitted (rounders). In the admitter‐rounder model, the admitter on a patient's first hospital day will generally not serve as the patient's rounder on subsequent hospital days.

Limited evidence exists to guide hospitalist groups on which model their service design should adopt. Conflicting evidence exists as to whether the fragmentation of care generated by an admitter‐rounder admission model is beneficial or harmful.[6, 7, 8, 9] Increased availability of attending inpatient physicians during the EDinpatient admission process has been associated with improved hospital mortality and decreased readmissions in hospital settings outside the United States, where attending availability may otherwise be limited.[10, 11, 12] Separation of admission and rounding activity within a hospitalist workforce may allow each group of hospitalists to provide more timely and effective care related to their respective tasks. Our division implemented a change from a general model to an admitter‐rounder model of care on January 2, 2012. We hypothesized that changing from a general admission model to an admitter‐rounder model of care would be associated with a decreased rate of transfer to the intensive care unit (ICU) 24 hours after floor arrival and shortened ED length of stay (LOS), due to improved availability of hospitalists during the admission process. Due to the introduction of discontinuity, we hypothesized that adoption of the admitter‐rounder model would be associated with a prolongation of hospital LOS and no overall effect on 30 day postdischarge readmission rate. We sought to examine the relationship between our division's service design change and our hypothesized variables of interest.

METHODS

Setting and Study Design

We retrospectively evaluated electronic medical records of patients admitted between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2013 from the ED to medical floor beds at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, an academic tertiary care teaching hospital located in Chicago, Illinois, under care of either a hospital medicine independent service or a medical teaching service. Admissions for care in observation units, service intake via interhospital or intrahospital transfers of care, or direct admissions from outpatient clinics that bypassed the ED were excluded, as was any patient with incomplete data, leaving 19,270 hospitalizations available for analysis. Each hospital medicine service was comprised of a single hospitalist with only clinical care responsibilities for the workday and no ICU or outpatient clinic responsibilities, with routine handover of the service to a hospitalist colleague every 7 days. Each medical teaching service was comprised of a supervising attending (often a hospitalist), a resident, 1 to 2 interns, and 1 to 3 medical students; the residents and interns maintained outpatient clinic responsibilities of 1 to 2 half days per service week. Inpatients on all teams were localized to hospital beds assigned to their care team. Regardless of hospitalist service design, 3 or more hospitalists were available each day to perform daytime admissions. Throughout the study period, both the hospital medicine and medicine teaching services utilized a group of physicians separate from the day teams to perform admissions and cross‐coverage at night, and the teaching services maintained a generalist model of daytime admission practice. All teams accepted new admissions every day. All ED admissions involved a phone‐based signout of transfer of care to the person admitting for the accepting ward team, followed by transfer of the patient to the floor, independent of whether the accepting team met the patient in the ED prior to transfer. None of the accepting inpatient services in the study had a formal right to refuse acceptance of patients referred for admission by the ED. The time period evaluated was constrained to avoid the effect of other service changes that took place before or after the study period. The Northwestern University Institutional Review Board approved the study (STU00087387).

Data Acquisition and Measures

Data were obtained from the Northwestern Memorial Hospital Enterprise Data Warehouse, an integrated repository of all clinical and research data for patients receiving care in the system. For analysis, the patients were separated into 4 groups: a prechange general admission hospitalist group (group 1), a postchange admitter‐rounder hospitalist group (group 2), and 2 teaching service control groups separated according to the prechange or postchange time period (groups 3 and 4, respectively). The primary outcome variable for the study was transfer of the patient to the ICU within 24 hours of inpatient floor arrival, which has been previously reported as an adverse outcome related to the admission process due to its association with increased inpatient mortality.[13] Secondary outcome variables included ED LOS, total hospital LOS, and readmission to Northwestern Memorial Hospital within 30 days of hospital discharge. Data on unexpected transfer to the operating room, discharge against medical advice (all within 24 hours of arrival to the ward), as well as mortality during the hospital stay were collected but not further analyzed due to the extremely low incidence of each. Covariables measured included each admitted patient's age, sex, race, Elixhauser composite score (a patient comorbidity score associated with inpatient mortality, described by van Walraven et al.[14]), case mix, insurance payer status, patient census on the accepting service for day 2 of the admitted patient's hospitalization, and hospital occupancy on the day of admission.[7, 14, 15, 16] Hospital occupancy was calculated as the sum of the number of beds occupied at midnight plus the number of patients discharged during the previous 24 hours, divided by the number of hospital beds, as defined by Forster et al.[16]

Statistical Analysis

Prestudy sample size calculation using an value of 0.05 and value of 0.2 to detect a 1.5% absolute difference in ICU transfer rate between postchange study groups, with a patient distribution ratio of 3.3:1 or higher between the admitter‐rounder and teaching postchange groups, and an assumed higher transfer rate in the teaching postchange group, revealed a requirement of at least 1068 hospitalizations in the teaching postchange group for our evaluation. Descriptive statistics were calculated for each patient group. Firth's logistic regressions were used to model the odds of patient being transfer to ICU within 24 hours after arrival and the odds of hospital readmission within 30 days after discharge, adjusting for confounders.[17] Quantile regressions were used to model the change in the median of ED LOS and the median of hospital LOS due to the right‐skewed distributions of LOS. Based on the clinical relevance to the outcomes, models were adjusted for patients' measured covariates. All covariates that were significant at = 0.05 level were considered significant. All statistical analyses were performed in SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC).

RESULTS

Patient Characteristics

The characteristics of the 4 patient populations are listed in Table 1. Compared to the general admission hospitalist group, the admitter‐rounder hospitalist group was more likely to be older (admitter‐rounder 61.9 19.0 vs 61.2 18.4, P = 0.03), a Medicare beneficiary (56.0% vs 52.9%, P < 0.001), have a higher Elixhauser composite score (6.6 7.3 vs 5.3 6.7, P < 0.001), and less likely to be white (46.5% vs 48.4%, P = 0.03). The teaching service patient characteristics changed over time only with regard to Elixhauser composite score (teaching postchange 6.4 7.3 vs 5.6 7.0, P < 0.001); except for case mix, all other covariates did not change significantly between prechange and postchange teaching services. There was no significant difference in Elixhauser composite score between hospitalist and teaching services during the study period. Hospitalist groups were more likely than teaching service groups to have older patients, both before (hospitalist 61.2 18.4 vs teaching 60.1 19.1, P = 0.009) and after (hospitalist 61.9 18.0 vs teaching 60.0 18.6, P < 0.001) the hospitalist admission system change. Compared to teaching groups, hospitalist groups were less likely to have female patients before the system change (hospitalist 52.3% vs 54.6%, P = 0.03), and more likely to have Medicare beneficiaries after the system change (hospitalist 56.0% vs 51.1%, P < 0.001). Significant differences in case mix existed in all comparisons among all 4 study groups.

Study Group Covariate Characteristics
Group 1 Hospitalist General, N = 8,465 Group 2 Hospitalist Admitter‐Rounder, N = 6,291 Group 3 Teaching Prechange, N = 2,636 Group 4 Teaching Postchange, N = 1,878 Group 2 vs Group 1, P Value Group 4 vs Group 3, P Value Group 1 vs Group 3, P Value Group 2 vs Group 4, P Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: SD, standard deviation.

Age, y, mean (SD) 61.2 (18.4) 61.9 (19.0) 60.1 (19.1) 60.0 (18.6) 0.03 0.88 0.009 <0.001
Female sex, n (%) 4,423 (52.3) 3,298 (52.4) 1,440 (54.6) 1,031 (54.9) 0.83 0.86 0.03 0.06
White race, n (%) 4,096 (48.4) 2,927 (46.5) 1,261 (47.8) 880 (46.9) 0.03 0.52 0.62 0.80
Payer status < 0.001 0.001 0.07 <0.001
Medicaid, n (%) 1,121 (13.2) 811 (12.9) 393 (14.9) 222 (11.8)
Medicare, n (%) 4,475 (52.9) 3,521 (56.0) 1,394 (52.9) 961 (51.2)
Private, n (%) 2,218 (26.2) 1,442 (22.9) 674 (25.6) 525 (28.0)
Self‐pay, n (%) 299 (3.5) 273 (4.3) 72 (2.7) 88 (4.7)
Other, n (%) 352 (4.2) 244 (3.9) 103 (3.9) 82 (4.4)
Elixhauser composite score, mean (SD) 5.3 (6.7) 6.6 (7.3) 5.6 (7.0) 6.4 (7.3) <0.001 0.007 0.05 0.30
Inpatient mortality, n (%) 74 (0.9) 70 (1.1) 31 (1.2) 18 (1.0) 0.14 0.51 0.15 0.62
No. of patients seen by accepting service, mean (SD) 10.2 (3.8) 12.0 (3.1) 6.3 (3.2) 7.0 (3.3) <0.001 <0.001 <0.001 <0.001
Hospital % occupancy at admission, mean (SD) 1.23 (0.18) 1.20 (0.17) 1.23 (0.18) 1.20 (0.17) <0.001 <0.001 0.61 0.43
Case mix, n (%) <0.001 <0.001 <0.001 <0.001
Diseases of the circulatory system 2,695 (31.8) 1,173 (18.9) 396 (15.0) 292 (15.6)
Other 1,139 (13.5) 1,151 (18.3) 423 (16.1) 292 (15.6)
Diseases of the respiratory system 883 (10.4) 612 (9.7) 314 (11.9) 541 (28.9)
Diseases of the digestive system 923 (10.9) 889 (14.1) 420 (15.9) 196 (10.4)
Diseases of the genitourinary system 492 (5.8) 525 (8.4) 230 (8.7) 122 (6.5)
Injury and poisoning 517 (6.1) 451 (7.2) 182 (6.9) 80 (4.3)
Endocrine, nutritional, and metabolic diseases and immunity disorders 473 (5.6) 357 (5.7) 194 (7.4) 76 (4.1)
Symptoms, signs, and ill‐defined conditions and factors influencing health status 470 (5.6) 267 (4.2) 141 (5.4) 63 (3.4)
Diseases of the musculoskeletal system and connective tissue 371 (4.4) 281 (4.5) 136 (5.1) 58 (3.1)
Infectious and parasitic diseases 234 (2.8) 288 (4.6) 108 (4.1) 98 (5.2)
Diseases of the blood and blood‐forming organs 268 (3.2) 297 (4.7) 92 (3.5) 60 (3.2)

Impact of the Admission System on Outcomes

Measured unadjusted primary and secondary outcomes for the 4 study groups, as well as inpatient mortality, are listed in Table 2. Comparative odds ratios (ORs) for the outcomes of transfer to ICU 24 hours of floor arrival and readmission to hospital 30 days after discharge, median (50% quantile) regression results for the outcomes of ED and hospital LOS, each adjusted by all study covariates, as well as associated difference‐in‐difference parameter estimates with associated standard error (SE) ranges and P values, are listed in Table 3. Difference‐in‐difference analysis of outcomes associated with adoption of the hospitalist admitter‐rounder system compared to the time‐matched teaching service revealed no statistically significant difference in associated ICU transfer outcome between hospitalist or teaching services (admitter‐rounder OR difference of +0.22, SE 0.22, P = 0.32). A significant decrease in associated odds for hospital readmission 30 days postdischarge was noted when adoption of the hospitalist admitter‐rounder system was compared to the time‐matched teaching service (admitter‐rounder OR difference of 0.21, SE 0.08, P = 0.01). Adoption of the hospitalist admitter‐rounder system, compared to the time‐matched teaching service, was associated with a significant increase in ED LOS (admitter‐rounder difference of +0.49 hours, SE 0.09, P < 0.001). Difference‐in‐difference analysis revealed no significant difference in associated hospital LOS between the hospitalist and time‐matched teaching services over the study period (admitter‐rounder difference of 0.39 hours, SE 2.44, P = 0.87).

Study Group Results

Group 1, Hospitalist General, N = 8,465

Group 2, Hospitalist Admitter‐Rounder, N = 6,291

Group 3, Teaching Prechange, N = 2,636

Group 4. Teaching Postchange, N = 1,878

  • NOTE: Abbreviations: SD, standard deviation.

Transfer to ICU 24 hours after ward arrival, n (%) 235 (2.8) 139 (2.2) 75 (2.9) 59 (3.1)
Hospital readmission 30 days after discharge, n (%) 1,924 (22.7) 1,546 (24.6) 608 (23.1) 504 (26.8)
Emergency department length of stay, h
Mean (SD) 6.9 (3.36) 7.39 (3.9) 7.05 (2.98) 6.89 (3.03)
Median [range] 6.22 [0.2262.47] 6.68 [0.62149.52] 6.53 [1.9833.63] 6.3 [2.0224.17]
Hospital length of stay, h
Mean (SD) 102.46 (120.14) 125.94 (153.41) 114.07 (165.62) 122.89 (125.55)
Median [range] 67.37 [0.521,964.07] 88.18 [0.285,801.28] 71.5 [4.575,131.37] 88.08 [4.731,262.58]
Rates of Transfer to Intensive Care Unit and Hospital Readmission, Emergency Department, and Hospital Length of Stay
Hospitalist Admitter‐Rounder vs Hospitalist General Teaching Postchange vs Teaching Prechange Difference‐in‐Difference Value Parameter Estimate [Standard Error], P Value
  • NOTE: All results adjusted for all measured covariates. Abbreviations: ICU, intensive care unit; OR, odds ratio.

Transfer to ICU 24 hours after floor arrival, OR (95% confidence interval) 1.292 (1.0261.629) 1.029 (0.7211.468) OR: +0.22 [ 0.22], 0.32
Hospital readmission 30 days after discharge, OR (95% confidence interval) 1.048 (0.9661.136) 1.298 (1.1271.495) OR: 0.21 [ 0.08], 0.01
Emergency department length of stay, median hours +0.40 0.09 +0.49 [ 0.09], <0.001
Hospital length of stay, median hours +12.96 +13.36 0.39 [ 2.44], 0.87

DISCUSSION

Our observations were revealing for a statistically nonsignificant trend toward increased ICU transfers 24 hours after floor arrival after adoption of the admitter‐rounder model by the hospital medicine service. Despite prior publication of early transfer to the ICU being associated with adverse outcomes, including increased inpatient mortality, we observed no difference in mortality in our study groups.[13] We suspect that earlier transfer to the ICU in our study cohort may instead represent a protective action taken more frequently by admitting hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model in response to provider discontinuity risks embedded in the admission process. Requests for transfer to the ICU at our institution require approval by the ICU team, and requests from attending hospitalists may be responded to differently from requests enacted by teaching team members, which as a factor also may account for some of the adjusted differences in transfer incidence. Taken together, increased availability of hospitalists during the admission process may result in earlier implementation of an overall lower threshold for implementation of ICU transfer. Our conclusion is limited by our study cohort's overall inpatient mortality rate, which is sufficiently low to preclude further assessment of the relationship of adverse outcomes with ICU transfer rate in our study groups. Therefore, clinical significance of our primary outcome findings, as well as the workload factors that impact ICU transfers initiated by hospitalist and teaching services, require further examination.

Despite a hypothesized increase in hospital LOS caused by additional discontinuity of hospitalist care in the admitter‐rounder model, adoption of the admitter‐rounder model was not associated with an increased hospital LOS. We suspect this finding may represent the presence of action(s) proximal to the admission process, on the part of either admission and/or rounding hospitalists, which decrease hospital LOS to a degree offsetting the expected LOS increase generated by provider discontinuity. Examples of such actions include more efficient testing or consultation, or improved detection of diagnostic errors.

Adoption of the admitter‐rounder model by the hospital medicine service was also associated with decreased hospital readmission rates compared to the time‐matched teaching service. We suspect that assignment of daily discharge and admission service activity to separate hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model may allow more opportunity for rounder hospitalists to engage in activity protective against readmissions, such as greater direct engagement with postdischarge resources, or improved hospitalist availability for multidisciplinary inpatient efforts focused on discharge planning.

Adoption of the admitter‐rounder model was found to be associated with a median 29‐minute increase in ED LOS compared to the time‐matched teaching service. As a floor team member's physical presence in the ED was not required for ED‐floor transfer during the study period, increased physical availability of admitting hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model may allow for increased opportunity for a hospitalist to disrupt ED‐specific workflows related to patient transfer (eg, disruption of transportation service activity by an earlier bedside visit from the admitting hospitalist). Hospitalists in the general model were allowed to leave after performing their daily duties, whereas admitting hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model were assigned to stay for a timed shift, regardless of the completion of admissions; the difference in duty assignment may be associated with different hospitalist behaviors during the admission process. Improved ease for ED staff to contact hospitalist staff in the admitter‐rounder model may have led ED staff to prioritize other tasks more demanding of their continuous engagement at the expense of initiating admissions, thereby paradoxically delaying admissions to hospital medicine.

Other studies exist that attempt to describe changes in admission service structure, particularly with regard to housestaff admission activity in relation to changes in resident work hours. Many of these studies vary with regard to implementation of separate physician teams for day and night coverage, or are focused on a specific medical condition, thereby limiting their applicability to a hospital medicine service free of work‐hour restrictions and engaged in care of a wide variety of medical conditions.[18, 19, 20] In contrast, our study is an attempt to examine, in isolation, outcomes associated with adoption of an admitter‐rounder model of care as a specific discontinuity risk during the admission process, within the context of a stable system of night coverage in place for all medical teams engaged in admission activity of undifferentiated medical patients.

Limitations of our study include the inability to ascertain causality of observed outcomes, due to our observational study design. Our study was of a single hospital, which may limit applicability of our results to other hospital environments. However, the admission models examined in our study are common among hospital medicine groups. Clinically relevant outcome metrics, such as mortality and unexpected transfer to the operating room, were measured but of too low incidence to allow for further meaningful analysis. The clinical consequences and workflow practices that correlate with our study's findings likely require case review and time‐motion analyses, respectively, to further delineate the relevance of our findings; these analyses were outside of the scope of our study, and further investigation is required. In summary, our observations suggest that adoption by hospitalist services of an admitter‐rounder model of care for admissions is associated with a decreased rate of hospital readmission 30 days after discharge, with no effect on median hospital LOS, a statistically nonsignificant trend toward more ICU transfers in the first 24 hours of a patient's hospital stay, and a slight increase in median ED LOS.

Acknowledgements

This study was conducted with logistical support, software, and computer hardware provided by the Division of Hospital Medicine, Department of Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, and by the Biostatistics Collaboration Center, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

Disclosure: Nothing to report.

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References
  1. Reisenberg LA, Leitzsch J, Massucci JL, et al. Residents' and attending physicians' handoffs: a systematic review of the literature. Acad Med. 2009;84(12):17751787.
  2. Bernstein SL, Aronsky D, Duseja R, et al. The effect of emergency department crowding on clinically oriented outcomes. Acad Emerg Med. 2009;16:110.
  3. Rathlew NK, Chessare J, Olshaker J, et al. Time series analysis of variables associated with daily mean emergency department length of stay. Ann Emerg Med. 2007;49:265271.
  4. Howell E, Bessman E, Kravet S, et al. Active bed management by hospitalists and emergency department throughput. Ann Intern Med. 2008;149:804810.
  5. Society of Hospital Medicine. 2014 state of hospital medicine report. 2014:22.
  6. Epstein K, Juarez E, Epstein A, Loya K, Singer A. The impact of fragmentation of hospitalist care on length of stay. J Hosp Med. 2010;5:335338.
  7. O'Leary KJ, Turner J, Christensen N, et al. The effect of hospitalist discontinuity on adverse events. J Hosp Med. 2015;10:147151.
  8. Schaffer AC, Puopolo AL, Raman S, Kachalia A. Liability impact of the hospitalist model of care. J Hosp Med. 2014;9:750755.
  9. Wachter RM. Does continuity of care matter? No: discontinuity can improve patient care. West J Med. 2001;175(1):5.
  10. Bell D, Lambourne A, Percival F, Laverty AA, Ward DK. Consultant input in acute medical admissions and patient outcomes in hospitals in England: a multivariate analysis. PLoS One. 2013;8(4):e61476.
  11. Scott I, Vaughan L, Bell D. Effectiveness of acute medical units in hospitals: a systematic review. Int J Qual Health Care. 2009;21(6):397407.
  12. Smith GR, Stein J, Jones M. Acute medicine in the United Kingdom: first‐hand perspectives on a parallel evolution of inpatient medical care. J Hosp Med. 2012:7(3);254257.
  13. Liu V, Kipnis P, Rizk NW, et al. Adverse outcomes associated with delayed intensive care unit transfers in an integrated healthcare system. J Hosp Med. 2012;7(3):224230.
  14. Walraven C, Austin PC, Jennings A, Quan H, Forster AJ. A modification of the Elixhauser comorbidity measures into a point system for hospital death using administrative data. Med Care. 2009;47(6):626633.
  15. Elliott DJ, Young RS, Brice J, Agular R, Kolm P. Effect of hospitalist workload on the quality and efficiency of care. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(5):786793.
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  18. Desai S, Feldman L, Brown L, et al. Effect of the 2011 vs 2003 duty hour regulation‐compliant models on sleep duration, trainee education, and continuity of patient care among internal medicine house staff. JAMA Intern Med. 2013;173(8):649655.
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Hospital admission represents a time period during which patients are at risk for poor clinical outcomes. Although some risk is directly generated by illness pathophysiology, some additive risk is generated by the emergency department (ED)inpatient service handover inherent in the admission process.[1] Increased risk of suboptimal outcomes can result from ED overcrowding, which has been associated with increased mortality, difficulty in patient disposition, and delays in provision of care.[2] Inpatient bed occupancy, as well as availability and organization of accepting inpatient service healthcare staff, can affect ED overcrowding as well.[3, 4]

The overwhelming majority of hospitalist groups accept a significant portion of their admissions via the ED.[5] Hospitalist services must balance their daily group workload between ongoing care and discharge of inpatients and the activity of admitting new patients to their service. Two major models of admission processing exist for hospitalist groups to accomplish these competing tasks. One model, called the general model, employs the use of individual hospitalists to simultaneously perform admission activity as well as ongoing ward‐based care for inpatients during their workday. In the general model, a hospitalist who admits patients on their first hospital day will generally continue to see them on their second hospital day. The other model, called the admitter‐rounder model, divides the hospitalist daily group workflow between hospitalists who are assigned to perform only admission activity (admitters), and hospitalists who are assigned to perform only ongoing care for patients who are already admitted (rounders). In the admitter‐rounder model, the admitter on a patient's first hospital day will generally not serve as the patient's rounder on subsequent hospital days.

Limited evidence exists to guide hospitalist groups on which model their service design should adopt. Conflicting evidence exists as to whether the fragmentation of care generated by an admitter‐rounder admission model is beneficial or harmful.[6, 7, 8, 9] Increased availability of attending inpatient physicians during the EDinpatient admission process has been associated with improved hospital mortality and decreased readmissions in hospital settings outside the United States, where attending availability may otherwise be limited.[10, 11, 12] Separation of admission and rounding activity within a hospitalist workforce may allow each group of hospitalists to provide more timely and effective care related to their respective tasks. Our division implemented a change from a general model to an admitter‐rounder model of care on January 2, 2012. We hypothesized that changing from a general admission model to an admitter‐rounder model of care would be associated with a decreased rate of transfer to the intensive care unit (ICU) 24 hours after floor arrival and shortened ED length of stay (LOS), due to improved availability of hospitalists during the admission process. Due to the introduction of discontinuity, we hypothesized that adoption of the admitter‐rounder model would be associated with a prolongation of hospital LOS and no overall effect on 30 day postdischarge readmission rate. We sought to examine the relationship between our division's service design change and our hypothesized variables of interest.

METHODS

Setting and Study Design

We retrospectively evaluated electronic medical records of patients admitted between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2013 from the ED to medical floor beds at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, an academic tertiary care teaching hospital located in Chicago, Illinois, under care of either a hospital medicine independent service or a medical teaching service. Admissions for care in observation units, service intake via interhospital or intrahospital transfers of care, or direct admissions from outpatient clinics that bypassed the ED were excluded, as was any patient with incomplete data, leaving 19,270 hospitalizations available for analysis. Each hospital medicine service was comprised of a single hospitalist with only clinical care responsibilities for the workday and no ICU or outpatient clinic responsibilities, with routine handover of the service to a hospitalist colleague every 7 days. Each medical teaching service was comprised of a supervising attending (often a hospitalist), a resident, 1 to 2 interns, and 1 to 3 medical students; the residents and interns maintained outpatient clinic responsibilities of 1 to 2 half days per service week. Inpatients on all teams were localized to hospital beds assigned to their care team. Regardless of hospitalist service design, 3 or more hospitalists were available each day to perform daytime admissions. Throughout the study period, both the hospital medicine and medicine teaching services utilized a group of physicians separate from the day teams to perform admissions and cross‐coverage at night, and the teaching services maintained a generalist model of daytime admission practice. All teams accepted new admissions every day. All ED admissions involved a phone‐based signout of transfer of care to the person admitting for the accepting ward team, followed by transfer of the patient to the floor, independent of whether the accepting team met the patient in the ED prior to transfer. None of the accepting inpatient services in the study had a formal right to refuse acceptance of patients referred for admission by the ED. The time period evaluated was constrained to avoid the effect of other service changes that took place before or after the study period. The Northwestern University Institutional Review Board approved the study (STU00087387).

Data Acquisition and Measures

Data were obtained from the Northwestern Memorial Hospital Enterprise Data Warehouse, an integrated repository of all clinical and research data for patients receiving care in the system. For analysis, the patients were separated into 4 groups: a prechange general admission hospitalist group (group 1), a postchange admitter‐rounder hospitalist group (group 2), and 2 teaching service control groups separated according to the prechange or postchange time period (groups 3 and 4, respectively). The primary outcome variable for the study was transfer of the patient to the ICU within 24 hours of inpatient floor arrival, which has been previously reported as an adverse outcome related to the admission process due to its association with increased inpatient mortality.[13] Secondary outcome variables included ED LOS, total hospital LOS, and readmission to Northwestern Memorial Hospital within 30 days of hospital discharge. Data on unexpected transfer to the operating room, discharge against medical advice (all within 24 hours of arrival to the ward), as well as mortality during the hospital stay were collected but not further analyzed due to the extremely low incidence of each. Covariables measured included each admitted patient's age, sex, race, Elixhauser composite score (a patient comorbidity score associated with inpatient mortality, described by van Walraven et al.[14]), case mix, insurance payer status, patient census on the accepting service for day 2 of the admitted patient's hospitalization, and hospital occupancy on the day of admission.[7, 14, 15, 16] Hospital occupancy was calculated as the sum of the number of beds occupied at midnight plus the number of patients discharged during the previous 24 hours, divided by the number of hospital beds, as defined by Forster et al.[16]

Statistical Analysis

Prestudy sample size calculation using an value of 0.05 and value of 0.2 to detect a 1.5% absolute difference in ICU transfer rate between postchange study groups, with a patient distribution ratio of 3.3:1 or higher between the admitter‐rounder and teaching postchange groups, and an assumed higher transfer rate in the teaching postchange group, revealed a requirement of at least 1068 hospitalizations in the teaching postchange group for our evaluation. Descriptive statistics were calculated for each patient group. Firth's logistic regressions were used to model the odds of patient being transfer to ICU within 24 hours after arrival and the odds of hospital readmission within 30 days after discharge, adjusting for confounders.[17] Quantile regressions were used to model the change in the median of ED LOS and the median of hospital LOS due to the right‐skewed distributions of LOS. Based on the clinical relevance to the outcomes, models were adjusted for patients' measured covariates. All covariates that were significant at = 0.05 level were considered significant. All statistical analyses were performed in SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC).

RESULTS

Patient Characteristics

The characteristics of the 4 patient populations are listed in Table 1. Compared to the general admission hospitalist group, the admitter‐rounder hospitalist group was more likely to be older (admitter‐rounder 61.9 19.0 vs 61.2 18.4, P = 0.03), a Medicare beneficiary (56.0% vs 52.9%, P < 0.001), have a higher Elixhauser composite score (6.6 7.3 vs 5.3 6.7, P < 0.001), and less likely to be white (46.5% vs 48.4%, P = 0.03). The teaching service patient characteristics changed over time only with regard to Elixhauser composite score (teaching postchange 6.4 7.3 vs 5.6 7.0, P < 0.001); except for case mix, all other covariates did not change significantly between prechange and postchange teaching services. There was no significant difference in Elixhauser composite score between hospitalist and teaching services during the study period. Hospitalist groups were more likely than teaching service groups to have older patients, both before (hospitalist 61.2 18.4 vs teaching 60.1 19.1, P = 0.009) and after (hospitalist 61.9 18.0 vs teaching 60.0 18.6, P < 0.001) the hospitalist admission system change. Compared to teaching groups, hospitalist groups were less likely to have female patients before the system change (hospitalist 52.3% vs 54.6%, P = 0.03), and more likely to have Medicare beneficiaries after the system change (hospitalist 56.0% vs 51.1%, P < 0.001). Significant differences in case mix existed in all comparisons among all 4 study groups.

Study Group Covariate Characteristics
Group 1 Hospitalist General, N = 8,465 Group 2 Hospitalist Admitter‐Rounder, N = 6,291 Group 3 Teaching Prechange, N = 2,636 Group 4 Teaching Postchange, N = 1,878 Group 2 vs Group 1, P Value Group 4 vs Group 3, P Value Group 1 vs Group 3, P Value Group 2 vs Group 4, P Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: SD, standard deviation.

Age, y, mean (SD) 61.2 (18.4) 61.9 (19.0) 60.1 (19.1) 60.0 (18.6) 0.03 0.88 0.009 <0.001
Female sex, n (%) 4,423 (52.3) 3,298 (52.4) 1,440 (54.6) 1,031 (54.9) 0.83 0.86 0.03 0.06
White race, n (%) 4,096 (48.4) 2,927 (46.5) 1,261 (47.8) 880 (46.9) 0.03 0.52 0.62 0.80
Payer status < 0.001 0.001 0.07 <0.001
Medicaid, n (%) 1,121 (13.2) 811 (12.9) 393 (14.9) 222 (11.8)
Medicare, n (%) 4,475 (52.9) 3,521 (56.0) 1,394 (52.9) 961 (51.2)
Private, n (%) 2,218 (26.2) 1,442 (22.9) 674 (25.6) 525 (28.0)
Self‐pay, n (%) 299 (3.5) 273 (4.3) 72 (2.7) 88 (4.7)
Other, n (%) 352 (4.2) 244 (3.9) 103 (3.9) 82 (4.4)
Elixhauser composite score, mean (SD) 5.3 (6.7) 6.6 (7.3) 5.6 (7.0) 6.4 (7.3) <0.001 0.007 0.05 0.30
Inpatient mortality, n (%) 74 (0.9) 70 (1.1) 31 (1.2) 18 (1.0) 0.14 0.51 0.15 0.62
No. of patients seen by accepting service, mean (SD) 10.2 (3.8) 12.0 (3.1) 6.3 (3.2) 7.0 (3.3) <0.001 <0.001 <0.001 <0.001
Hospital % occupancy at admission, mean (SD) 1.23 (0.18) 1.20 (0.17) 1.23 (0.18) 1.20 (0.17) <0.001 <0.001 0.61 0.43
Case mix, n (%) <0.001 <0.001 <0.001 <0.001
Diseases of the circulatory system 2,695 (31.8) 1,173 (18.9) 396 (15.0) 292 (15.6)
Other 1,139 (13.5) 1,151 (18.3) 423 (16.1) 292 (15.6)
Diseases of the respiratory system 883 (10.4) 612 (9.7) 314 (11.9) 541 (28.9)
Diseases of the digestive system 923 (10.9) 889 (14.1) 420 (15.9) 196 (10.4)
Diseases of the genitourinary system 492 (5.8) 525 (8.4) 230 (8.7) 122 (6.5)
Injury and poisoning 517 (6.1) 451 (7.2) 182 (6.9) 80 (4.3)
Endocrine, nutritional, and metabolic diseases and immunity disorders 473 (5.6) 357 (5.7) 194 (7.4) 76 (4.1)
Symptoms, signs, and ill‐defined conditions and factors influencing health status 470 (5.6) 267 (4.2) 141 (5.4) 63 (3.4)
Diseases of the musculoskeletal system and connective tissue 371 (4.4) 281 (4.5) 136 (5.1) 58 (3.1)
Infectious and parasitic diseases 234 (2.8) 288 (4.6) 108 (4.1) 98 (5.2)
Diseases of the blood and blood‐forming organs 268 (3.2) 297 (4.7) 92 (3.5) 60 (3.2)

Impact of the Admission System on Outcomes

Measured unadjusted primary and secondary outcomes for the 4 study groups, as well as inpatient mortality, are listed in Table 2. Comparative odds ratios (ORs) for the outcomes of transfer to ICU 24 hours of floor arrival and readmission to hospital 30 days after discharge, median (50% quantile) regression results for the outcomes of ED and hospital LOS, each adjusted by all study covariates, as well as associated difference‐in‐difference parameter estimates with associated standard error (SE) ranges and P values, are listed in Table 3. Difference‐in‐difference analysis of outcomes associated with adoption of the hospitalist admitter‐rounder system compared to the time‐matched teaching service revealed no statistically significant difference in associated ICU transfer outcome between hospitalist or teaching services (admitter‐rounder OR difference of +0.22, SE 0.22, P = 0.32). A significant decrease in associated odds for hospital readmission 30 days postdischarge was noted when adoption of the hospitalist admitter‐rounder system was compared to the time‐matched teaching service (admitter‐rounder OR difference of 0.21, SE 0.08, P = 0.01). Adoption of the hospitalist admitter‐rounder system, compared to the time‐matched teaching service, was associated with a significant increase in ED LOS (admitter‐rounder difference of +0.49 hours, SE 0.09, P < 0.001). Difference‐in‐difference analysis revealed no significant difference in associated hospital LOS between the hospitalist and time‐matched teaching services over the study period (admitter‐rounder difference of 0.39 hours, SE 2.44, P = 0.87).

Study Group Results

Group 1, Hospitalist General, N = 8,465

Group 2, Hospitalist Admitter‐Rounder, N = 6,291

Group 3, Teaching Prechange, N = 2,636

Group 4. Teaching Postchange, N = 1,878

  • NOTE: Abbreviations: SD, standard deviation.

Transfer to ICU 24 hours after ward arrival, n (%) 235 (2.8) 139 (2.2) 75 (2.9) 59 (3.1)
Hospital readmission 30 days after discharge, n (%) 1,924 (22.7) 1,546 (24.6) 608 (23.1) 504 (26.8)
Emergency department length of stay, h
Mean (SD) 6.9 (3.36) 7.39 (3.9) 7.05 (2.98) 6.89 (3.03)
Median [range] 6.22 [0.2262.47] 6.68 [0.62149.52] 6.53 [1.9833.63] 6.3 [2.0224.17]
Hospital length of stay, h
Mean (SD) 102.46 (120.14) 125.94 (153.41) 114.07 (165.62) 122.89 (125.55)
Median [range] 67.37 [0.521,964.07] 88.18 [0.285,801.28] 71.5 [4.575,131.37] 88.08 [4.731,262.58]
Rates of Transfer to Intensive Care Unit and Hospital Readmission, Emergency Department, and Hospital Length of Stay
Hospitalist Admitter‐Rounder vs Hospitalist General Teaching Postchange vs Teaching Prechange Difference‐in‐Difference Value Parameter Estimate [Standard Error], P Value
  • NOTE: All results adjusted for all measured covariates. Abbreviations: ICU, intensive care unit; OR, odds ratio.

Transfer to ICU 24 hours after floor arrival, OR (95% confidence interval) 1.292 (1.0261.629) 1.029 (0.7211.468) OR: +0.22 [ 0.22], 0.32
Hospital readmission 30 days after discharge, OR (95% confidence interval) 1.048 (0.9661.136) 1.298 (1.1271.495) OR: 0.21 [ 0.08], 0.01
Emergency department length of stay, median hours +0.40 0.09 +0.49 [ 0.09], <0.001
Hospital length of stay, median hours +12.96 +13.36 0.39 [ 2.44], 0.87

DISCUSSION

Our observations were revealing for a statistically nonsignificant trend toward increased ICU transfers 24 hours after floor arrival after adoption of the admitter‐rounder model by the hospital medicine service. Despite prior publication of early transfer to the ICU being associated with adverse outcomes, including increased inpatient mortality, we observed no difference in mortality in our study groups.[13] We suspect that earlier transfer to the ICU in our study cohort may instead represent a protective action taken more frequently by admitting hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model in response to provider discontinuity risks embedded in the admission process. Requests for transfer to the ICU at our institution require approval by the ICU team, and requests from attending hospitalists may be responded to differently from requests enacted by teaching team members, which as a factor also may account for some of the adjusted differences in transfer incidence. Taken together, increased availability of hospitalists during the admission process may result in earlier implementation of an overall lower threshold for implementation of ICU transfer. Our conclusion is limited by our study cohort's overall inpatient mortality rate, which is sufficiently low to preclude further assessment of the relationship of adverse outcomes with ICU transfer rate in our study groups. Therefore, clinical significance of our primary outcome findings, as well as the workload factors that impact ICU transfers initiated by hospitalist and teaching services, require further examination.

Despite a hypothesized increase in hospital LOS caused by additional discontinuity of hospitalist care in the admitter‐rounder model, adoption of the admitter‐rounder model was not associated with an increased hospital LOS. We suspect this finding may represent the presence of action(s) proximal to the admission process, on the part of either admission and/or rounding hospitalists, which decrease hospital LOS to a degree offsetting the expected LOS increase generated by provider discontinuity. Examples of such actions include more efficient testing or consultation, or improved detection of diagnostic errors.

Adoption of the admitter‐rounder model by the hospital medicine service was also associated with decreased hospital readmission rates compared to the time‐matched teaching service. We suspect that assignment of daily discharge and admission service activity to separate hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model may allow more opportunity for rounder hospitalists to engage in activity protective against readmissions, such as greater direct engagement with postdischarge resources, or improved hospitalist availability for multidisciplinary inpatient efforts focused on discharge planning.

Adoption of the admitter‐rounder model was found to be associated with a median 29‐minute increase in ED LOS compared to the time‐matched teaching service. As a floor team member's physical presence in the ED was not required for ED‐floor transfer during the study period, increased physical availability of admitting hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model may allow for increased opportunity for a hospitalist to disrupt ED‐specific workflows related to patient transfer (eg, disruption of transportation service activity by an earlier bedside visit from the admitting hospitalist). Hospitalists in the general model were allowed to leave after performing their daily duties, whereas admitting hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model were assigned to stay for a timed shift, regardless of the completion of admissions; the difference in duty assignment may be associated with different hospitalist behaviors during the admission process. Improved ease for ED staff to contact hospitalist staff in the admitter‐rounder model may have led ED staff to prioritize other tasks more demanding of their continuous engagement at the expense of initiating admissions, thereby paradoxically delaying admissions to hospital medicine.

Other studies exist that attempt to describe changes in admission service structure, particularly with regard to housestaff admission activity in relation to changes in resident work hours. Many of these studies vary with regard to implementation of separate physician teams for day and night coverage, or are focused on a specific medical condition, thereby limiting their applicability to a hospital medicine service free of work‐hour restrictions and engaged in care of a wide variety of medical conditions.[18, 19, 20] In contrast, our study is an attempt to examine, in isolation, outcomes associated with adoption of an admitter‐rounder model of care as a specific discontinuity risk during the admission process, within the context of a stable system of night coverage in place for all medical teams engaged in admission activity of undifferentiated medical patients.

Limitations of our study include the inability to ascertain causality of observed outcomes, due to our observational study design. Our study was of a single hospital, which may limit applicability of our results to other hospital environments. However, the admission models examined in our study are common among hospital medicine groups. Clinically relevant outcome metrics, such as mortality and unexpected transfer to the operating room, were measured but of too low incidence to allow for further meaningful analysis. The clinical consequences and workflow practices that correlate with our study's findings likely require case review and time‐motion analyses, respectively, to further delineate the relevance of our findings; these analyses were outside of the scope of our study, and further investigation is required. In summary, our observations suggest that adoption by hospitalist services of an admitter‐rounder model of care for admissions is associated with a decreased rate of hospital readmission 30 days after discharge, with no effect on median hospital LOS, a statistically nonsignificant trend toward more ICU transfers in the first 24 hours of a patient's hospital stay, and a slight increase in median ED LOS.

Acknowledgements

This study was conducted with logistical support, software, and computer hardware provided by the Division of Hospital Medicine, Department of Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, and by the Biostatistics Collaboration Center, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

Disclosure: Nothing to report.

Hospital admission represents a time period during which patients are at risk for poor clinical outcomes. Although some risk is directly generated by illness pathophysiology, some additive risk is generated by the emergency department (ED)inpatient service handover inherent in the admission process.[1] Increased risk of suboptimal outcomes can result from ED overcrowding, which has been associated with increased mortality, difficulty in patient disposition, and delays in provision of care.[2] Inpatient bed occupancy, as well as availability and organization of accepting inpatient service healthcare staff, can affect ED overcrowding as well.[3, 4]

The overwhelming majority of hospitalist groups accept a significant portion of their admissions via the ED.[5] Hospitalist services must balance their daily group workload between ongoing care and discharge of inpatients and the activity of admitting new patients to their service. Two major models of admission processing exist for hospitalist groups to accomplish these competing tasks. One model, called the general model, employs the use of individual hospitalists to simultaneously perform admission activity as well as ongoing ward‐based care for inpatients during their workday. In the general model, a hospitalist who admits patients on their first hospital day will generally continue to see them on their second hospital day. The other model, called the admitter‐rounder model, divides the hospitalist daily group workflow between hospitalists who are assigned to perform only admission activity (admitters), and hospitalists who are assigned to perform only ongoing care for patients who are already admitted (rounders). In the admitter‐rounder model, the admitter on a patient's first hospital day will generally not serve as the patient's rounder on subsequent hospital days.

Limited evidence exists to guide hospitalist groups on which model their service design should adopt. Conflicting evidence exists as to whether the fragmentation of care generated by an admitter‐rounder admission model is beneficial or harmful.[6, 7, 8, 9] Increased availability of attending inpatient physicians during the EDinpatient admission process has been associated with improved hospital mortality and decreased readmissions in hospital settings outside the United States, where attending availability may otherwise be limited.[10, 11, 12] Separation of admission and rounding activity within a hospitalist workforce may allow each group of hospitalists to provide more timely and effective care related to their respective tasks. Our division implemented a change from a general model to an admitter‐rounder model of care on January 2, 2012. We hypothesized that changing from a general admission model to an admitter‐rounder model of care would be associated with a decreased rate of transfer to the intensive care unit (ICU) 24 hours after floor arrival and shortened ED length of stay (LOS), due to improved availability of hospitalists during the admission process. Due to the introduction of discontinuity, we hypothesized that adoption of the admitter‐rounder model would be associated with a prolongation of hospital LOS and no overall effect on 30 day postdischarge readmission rate. We sought to examine the relationship between our division's service design change and our hypothesized variables of interest.

METHODS

Setting and Study Design

We retrospectively evaluated electronic medical records of patients admitted between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2013 from the ED to medical floor beds at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, an academic tertiary care teaching hospital located in Chicago, Illinois, under care of either a hospital medicine independent service or a medical teaching service. Admissions for care in observation units, service intake via interhospital or intrahospital transfers of care, or direct admissions from outpatient clinics that bypassed the ED were excluded, as was any patient with incomplete data, leaving 19,270 hospitalizations available for analysis. Each hospital medicine service was comprised of a single hospitalist with only clinical care responsibilities for the workday and no ICU or outpatient clinic responsibilities, with routine handover of the service to a hospitalist colleague every 7 days. Each medical teaching service was comprised of a supervising attending (often a hospitalist), a resident, 1 to 2 interns, and 1 to 3 medical students; the residents and interns maintained outpatient clinic responsibilities of 1 to 2 half days per service week. Inpatients on all teams were localized to hospital beds assigned to their care team. Regardless of hospitalist service design, 3 or more hospitalists were available each day to perform daytime admissions. Throughout the study period, both the hospital medicine and medicine teaching services utilized a group of physicians separate from the day teams to perform admissions and cross‐coverage at night, and the teaching services maintained a generalist model of daytime admission practice. All teams accepted new admissions every day. All ED admissions involved a phone‐based signout of transfer of care to the person admitting for the accepting ward team, followed by transfer of the patient to the floor, independent of whether the accepting team met the patient in the ED prior to transfer. None of the accepting inpatient services in the study had a formal right to refuse acceptance of patients referred for admission by the ED. The time period evaluated was constrained to avoid the effect of other service changes that took place before or after the study period. The Northwestern University Institutional Review Board approved the study (STU00087387).

Data Acquisition and Measures

Data were obtained from the Northwestern Memorial Hospital Enterprise Data Warehouse, an integrated repository of all clinical and research data for patients receiving care in the system. For analysis, the patients were separated into 4 groups: a prechange general admission hospitalist group (group 1), a postchange admitter‐rounder hospitalist group (group 2), and 2 teaching service control groups separated according to the prechange or postchange time period (groups 3 and 4, respectively). The primary outcome variable for the study was transfer of the patient to the ICU within 24 hours of inpatient floor arrival, which has been previously reported as an adverse outcome related to the admission process due to its association with increased inpatient mortality.[13] Secondary outcome variables included ED LOS, total hospital LOS, and readmission to Northwestern Memorial Hospital within 30 days of hospital discharge. Data on unexpected transfer to the operating room, discharge against medical advice (all within 24 hours of arrival to the ward), as well as mortality during the hospital stay were collected but not further analyzed due to the extremely low incidence of each. Covariables measured included each admitted patient's age, sex, race, Elixhauser composite score (a patient comorbidity score associated with inpatient mortality, described by van Walraven et al.[14]), case mix, insurance payer status, patient census on the accepting service for day 2 of the admitted patient's hospitalization, and hospital occupancy on the day of admission.[7, 14, 15, 16] Hospital occupancy was calculated as the sum of the number of beds occupied at midnight plus the number of patients discharged during the previous 24 hours, divided by the number of hospital beds, as defined by Forster et al.[16]

Statistical Analysis

Prestudy sample size calculation using an value of 0.05 and value of 0.2 to detect a 1.5% absolute difference in ICU transfer rate between postchange study groups, with a patient distribution ratio of 3.3:1 or higher between the admitter‐rounder and teaching postchange groups, and an assumed higher transfer rate in the teaching postchange group, revealed a requirement of at least 1068 hospitalizations in the teaching postchange group for our evaluation. Descriptive statistics were calculated for each patient group. Firth's logistic regressions were used to model the odds of patient being transfer to ICU within 24 hours after arrival and the odds of hospital readmission within 30 days after discharge, adjusting for confounders.[17] Quantile regressions were used to model the change in the median of ED LOS and the median of hospital LOS due to the right‐skewed distributions of LOS. Based on the clinical relevance to the outcomes, models were adjusted for patients' measured covariates. All covariates that were significant at = 0.05 level were considered significant. All statistical analyses were performed in SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC).

RESULTS

Patient Characteristics

The characteristics of the 4 patient populations are listed in Table 1. Compared to the general admission hospitalist group, the admitter‐rounder hospitalist group was more likely to be older (admitter‐rounder 61.9 19.0 vs 61.2 18.4, P = 0.03), a Medicare beneficiary (56.0% vs 52.9%, P < 0.001), have a higher Elixhauser composite score (6.6 7.3 vs 5.3 6.7, P < 0.001), and less likely to be white (46.5% vs 48.4%, P = 0.03). The teaching service patient characteristics changed over time only with regard to Elixhauser composite score (teaching postchange 6.4 7.3 vs 5.6 7.0, P < 0.001); except for case mix, all other covariates did not change significantly between prechange and postchange teaching services. There was no significant difference in Elixhauser composite score between hospitalist and teaching services during the study period. Hospitalist groups were more likely than teaching service groups to have older patients, both before (hospitalist 61.2 18.4 vs teaching 60.1 19.1, P = 0.009) and after (hospitalist 61.9 18.0 vs teaching 60.0 18.6, P < 0.001) the hospitalist admission system change. Compared to teaching groups, hospitalist groups were less likely to have female patients before the system change (hospitalist 52.3% vs 54.6%, P = 0.03), and more likely to have Medicare beneficiaries after the system change (hospitalist 56.0% vs 51.1%, P < 0.001). Significant differences in case mix existed in all comparisons among all 4 study groups.

Study Group Covariate Characteristics
Group 1 Hospitalist General, N = 8,465 Group 2 Hospitalist Admitter‐Rounder, N = 6,291 Group 3 Teaching Prechange, N = 2,636 Group 4 Teaching Postchange, N = 1,878 Group 2 vs Group 1, P Value Group 4 vs Group 3, P Value Group 1 vs Group 3, P Value Group 2 vs Group 4, P Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: SD, standard deviation.

Age, y, mean (SD) 61.2 (18.4) 61.9 (19.0) 60.1 (19.1) 60.0 (18.6) 0.03 0.88 0.009 <0.001
Female sex, n (%) 4,423 (52.3) 3,298 (52.4) 1,440 (54.6) 1,031 (54.9) 0.83 0.86 0.03 0.06
White race, n (%) 4,096 (48.4) 2,927 (46.5) 1,261 (47.8) 880 (46.9) 0.03 0.52 0.62 0.80
Payer status < 0.001 0.001 0.07 <0.001
Medicaid, n (%) 1,121 (13.2) 811 (12.9) 393 (14.9) 222 (11.8)
Medicare, n (%) 4,475 (52.9) 3,521 (56.0) 1,394 (52.9) 961 (51.2)
Private, n (%) 2,218 (26.2) 1,442 (22.9) 674 (25.6) 525 (28.0)
Self‐pay, n (%) 299 (3.5) 273 (4.3) 72 (2.7) 88 (4.7)
Other, n (%) 352 (4.2) 244 (3.9) 103 (3.9) 82 (4.4)
Elixhauser composite score, mean (SD) 5.3 (6.7) 6.6 (7.3) 5.6 (7.0) 6.4 (7.3) <0.001 0.007 0.05 0.30
Inpatient mortality, n (%) 74 (0.9) 70 (1.1) 31 (1.2) 18 (1.0) 0.14 0.51 0.15 0.62
No. of patients seen by accepting service, mean (SD) 10.2 (3.8) 12.0 (3.1) 6.3 (3.2) 7.0 (3.3) <0.001 <0.001 <0.001 <0.001
Hospital % occupancy at admission, mean (SD) 1.23 (0.18) 1.20 (0.17) 1.23 (0.18) 1.20 (0.17) <0.001 <0.001 0.61 0.43
Case mix, n (%) <0.001 <0.001 <0.001 <0.001
Diseases of the circulatory system 2,695 (31.8) 1,173 (18.9) 396 (15.0) 292 (15.6)
Other 1,139 (13.5) 1,151 (18.3) 423 (16.1) 292 (15.6)
Diseases of the respiratory system 883 (10.4) 612 (9.7) 314 (11.9) 541 (28.9)
Diseases of the digestive system 923 (10.9) 889 (14.1) 420 (15.9) 196 (10.4)
Diseases of the genitourinary system 492 (5.8) 525 (8.4) 230 (8.7) 122 (6.5)
Injury and poisoning 517 (6.1) 451 (7.2) 182 (6.9) 80 (4.3)
Endocrine, nutritional, and metabolic diseases and immunity disorders 473 (5.6) 357 (5.7) 194 (7.4) 76 (4.1)
Symptoms, signs, and ill‐defined conditions and factors influencing health status 470 (5.6) 267 (4.2) 141 (5.4) 63 (3.4)
Diseases of the musculoskeletal system and connective tissue 371 (4.4) 281 (4.5) 136 (5.1) 58 (3.1)
Infectious and parasitic diseases 234 (2.8) 288 (4.6) 108 (4.1) 98 (5.2)
Diseases of the blood and blood‐forming organs 268 (3.2) 297 (4.7) 92 (3.5) 60 (3.2)

Impact of the Admission System on Outcomes

Measured unadjusted primary and secondary outcomes for the 4 study groups, as well as inpatient mortality, are listed in Table 2. Comparative odds ratios (ORs) for the outcomes of transfer to ICU 24 hours of floor arrival and readmission to hospital 30 days after discharge, median (50% quantile) regression results for the outcomes of ED and hospital LOS, each adjusted by all study covariates, as well as associated difference‐in‐difference parameter estimates with associated standard error (SE) ranges and P values, are listed in Table 3. Difference‐in‐difference analysis of outcomes associated with adoption of the hospitalist admitter‐rounder system compared to the time‐matched teaching service revealed no statistically significant difference in associated ICU transfer outcome between hospitalist or teaching services (admitter‐rounder OR difference of +0.22, SE 0.22, P = 0.32). A significant decrease in associated odds for hospital readmission 30 days postdischarge was noted when adoption of the hospitalist admitter‐rounder system was compared to the time‐matched teaching service (admitter‐rounder OR difference of 0.21, SE 0.08, P = 0.01). Adoption of the hospitalist admitter‐rounder system, compared to the time‐matched teaching service, was associated with a significant increase in ED LOS (admitter‐rounder difference of +0.49 hours, SE 0.09, P < 0.001). Difference‐in‐difference analysis revealed no significant difference in associated hospital LOS between the hospitalist and time‐matched teaching services over the study period (admitter‐rounder difference of 0.39 hours, SE 2.44, P = 0.87).

Study Group Results

Group 1, Hospitalist General, N = 8,465

Group 2, Hospitalist Admitter‐Rounder, N = 6,291

Group 3, Teaching Prechange, N = 2,636

Group 4. Teaching Postchange, N = 1,878

  • NOTE: Abbreviations: SD, standard deviation.

Transfer to ICU 24 hours after ward arrival, n (%) 235 (2.8) 139 (2.2) 75 (2.9) 59 (3.1)
Hospital readmission 30 days after discharge, n (%) 1,924 (22.7) 1,546 (24.6) 608 (23.1) 504 (26.8)
Emergency department length of stay, h
Mean (SD) 6.9 (3.36) 7.39 (3.9) 7.05 (2.98) 6.89 (3.03)
Median [range] 6.22 [0.2262.47] 6.68 [0.62149.52] 6.53 [1.9833.63] 6.3 [2.0224.17]
Hospital length of stay, h
Mean (SD) 102.46 (120.14) 125.94 (153.41) 114.07 (165.62) 122.89 (125.55)
Median [range] 67.37 [0.521,964.07] 88.18 [0.285,801.28] 71.5 [4.575,131.37] 88.08 [4.731,262.58]
Rates of Transfer to Intensive Care Unit and Hospital Readmission, Emergency Department, and Hospital Length of Stay
Hospitalist Admitter‐Rounder vs Hospitalist General Teaching Postchange vs Teaching Prechange Difference‐in‐Difference Value Parameter Estimate [Standard Error], P Value
  • NOTE: All results adjusted for all measured covariates. Abbreviations: ICU, intensive care unit; OR, odds ratio.

Transfer to ICU 24 hours after floor arrival, OR (95% confidence interval) 1.292 (1.0261.629) 1.029 (0.7211.468) OR: +0.22 [ 0.22], 0.32
Hospital readmission 30 days after discharge, OR (95% confidence interval) 1.048 (0.9661.136) 1.298 (1.1271.495) OR: 0.21 [ 0.08], 0.01
Emergency department length of stay, median hours +0.40 0.09 +0.49 [ 0.09], <0.001
Hospital length of stay, median hours +12.96 +13.36 0.39 [ 2.44], 0.87

DISCUSSION

Our observations were revealing for a statistically nonsignificant trend toward increased ICU transfers 24 hours after floor arrival after adoption of the admitter‐rounder model by the hospital medicine service. Despite prior publication of early transfer to the ICU being associated with adverse outcomes, including increased inpatient mortality, we observed no difference in mortality in our study groups.[13] We suspect that earlier transfer to the ICU in our study cohort may instead represent a protective action taken more frequently by admitting hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model in response to provider discontinuity risks embedded in the admission process. Requests for transfer to the ICU at our institution require approval by the ICU team, and requests from attending hospitalists may be responded to differently from requests enacted by teaching team members, which as a factor also may account for some of the adjusted differences in transfer incidence. Taken together, increased availability of hospitalists during the admission process may result in earlier implementation of an overall lower threshold for implementation of ICU transfer. Our conclusion is limited by our study cohort's overall inpatient mortality rate, which is sufficiently low to preclude further assessment of the relationship of adverse outcomes with ICU transfer rate in our study groups. Therefore, clinical significance of our primary outcome findings, as well as the workload factors that impact ICU transfers initiated by hospitalist and teaching services, require further examination.

Despite a hypothesized increase in hospital LOS caused by additional discontinuity of hospitalist care in the admitter‐rounder model, adoption of the admitter‐rounder model was not associated with an increased hospital LOS. We suspect this finding may represent the presence of action(s) proximal to the admission process, on the part of either admission and/or rounding hospitalists, which decrease hospital LOS to a degree offsetting the expected LOS increase generated by provider discontinuity. Examples of such actions include more efficient testing or consultation, or improved detection of diagnostic errors.

Adoption of the admitter‐rounder model by the hospital medicine service was also associated with decreased hospital readmission rates compared to the time‐matched teaching service. We suspect that assignment of daily discharge and admission service activity to separate hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model may allow more opportunity for rounder hospitalists to engage in activity protective against readmissions, such as greater direct engagement with postdischarge resources, or improved hospitalist availability for multidisciplinary inpatient efforts focused on discharge planning.

Adoption of the admitter‐rounder model was found to be associated with a median 29‐minute increase in ED LOS compared to the time‐matched teaching service. As a floor team member's physical presence in the ED was not required for ED‐floor transfer during the study period, increased physical availability of admitting hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model may allow for increased opportunity for a hospitalist to disrupt ED‐specific workflows related to patient transfer (eg, disruption of transportation service activity by an earlier bedside visit from the admitting hospitalist). Hospitalists in the general model were allowed to leave after performing their daily duties, whereas admitting hospitalists in the admitter‐rounder model were assigned to stay for a timed shift, regardless of the completion of admissions; the difference in duty assignment may be associated with different hospitalist behaviors during the admission process. Improved ease for ED staff to contact hospitalist staff in the admitter‐rounder model may have led ED staff to prioritize other tasks more demanding of their continuous engagement at the expense of initiating admissions, thereby paradoxically delaying admissions to hospital medicine.

Other studies exist that attempt to describe changes in admission service structure, particularly with regard to housestaff admission activity in relation to changes in resident work hours. Many of these studies vary with regard to implementation of separate physician teams for day and night coverage, or are focused on a specific medical condition, thereby limiting their applicability to a hospital medicine service free of work‐hour restrictions and engaged in care of a wide variety of medical conditions.[18, 19, 20] In contrast, our study is an attempt to examine, in isolation, outcomes associated with adoption of an admitter‐rounder model of care as a specific discontinuity risk during the admission process, within the context of a stable system of night coverage in place for all medical teams engaged in admission activity of undifferentiated medical patients.

Limitations of our study include the inability to ascertain causality of observed outcomes, due to our observational study design. Our study was of a single hospital, which may limit applicability of our results to other hospital environments. However, the admission models examined in our study are common among hospital medicine groups. Clinically relevant outcome metrics, such as mortality and unexpected transfer to the operating room, were measured but of too low incidence to allow for further meaningful analysis. The clinical consequences and workflow practices that correlate with our study's findings likely require case review and time‐motion analyses, respectively, to further delineate the relevance of our findings; these analyses were outside of the scope of our study, and further investigation is required. In summary, our observations suggest that adoption by hospitalist services of an admitter‐rounder model of care for admissions is associated with a decreased rate of hospital readmission 30 days after discharge, with no effect on median hospital LOS, a statistically nonsignificant trend toward more ICU transfers in the first 24 hours of a patient's hospital stay, and a slight increase in median ED LOS.

Acknowledgements

This study was conducted with logistical support, software, and computer hardware provided by the Division of Hospital Medicine, Department of Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, and by the Biostatistics Collaboration Center, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

Disclosure: Nothing to report.

References
  1. Reisenberg LA, Leitzsch J, Massucci JL, et al. Residents' and attending physicians' handoffs: a systematic review of the literature. Acad Med. 2009;84(12):17751787.
  2. Bernstein SL, Aronsky D, Duseja R, et al. The effect of emergency department crowding on clinically oriented outcomes. Acad Emerg Med. 2009;16:110.
  3. Rathlew NK, Chessare J, Olshaker J, et al. Time series analysis of variables associated with daily mean emergency department length of stay. Ann Emerg Med. 2007;49:265271.
  4. Howell E, Bessman E, Kravet S, et al. Active bed management by hospitalists and emergency department throughput. Ann Intern Med. 2008;149:804810.
  5. Society of Hospital Medicine. 2014 state of hospital medicine report. 2014:22.
  6. Epstein K, Juarez E, Epstein A, Loya K, Singer A. The impact of fragmentation of hospitalist care on length of stay. J Hosp Med. 2010;5:335338.
  7. O'Leary KJ, Turner J, Christensen N, et al. The effect of hospitalist discontinuity on adverse events. J Hosp Med. 2015;10:147151.
  8. Schaffer AC, Puopolo AL, Raman S, Kachalia A. Liability impact of the hospitalist model of care. J Hosp Med. 2014;9:750755.
  9. Wachter RM. Does continuity of care matter? No: discontinuity can improve patient care. West J Med. 2001;175(1):5.
  10. Bell D, Lambourne A, Percival F, Laverty AA, Ward DK. Consultant input in acute medical admissions and patient outcomes in hospitals in England: a multivariate analysis. PLoS One. 2013;8(4):e61476.
  11. Scott I, Vaughan L, Bell D. Effectiveness of acute medical units in hospitals: a systematic review. Int J Qual Health Care. 2009;21(6):397407.
  12. Smith GR, Stein J, Jones M. Acute medicine in the United Kingdom: first‐hand perspectives on a parallel evolution of inpatient medical care. J Hosp Med. 2012:7(3);254257.
  13. Liu V, Kipnis P, Rizk NW, et al. Adverse outcomes associated with delayed intensive care unit transfers in an integrated healthcare system. J Hosp Med. 2012;7(3):224230.
  14. Walraven C, Austin PC, Jennings A, Quan H, Forster AJ. A modification of the Elixhauser comorbidity measures into a point system for hospital death using administrative data. Med Care. 2009;47(6):626633.
  15. Elliott DJ, Young RS, Brice J, Agular R, Kolm P. Effect of hospitalist workload on the quality and efficiency of care. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(5):786793.
  16. Forster AJ, Stiell I, Wells G, Lee AJ, Walraven C. The effect of hospital occupancy on emergency department length of stay and patient disposition. Acad Emerg Med. 2003;10(2):127133.
  17. Firth D. Bias reduction of maximum likelihood estimates. Biometrika. 1993;80(1):2738.
  18. Desai S, Feldman L, Brown L, et al. Effect of the 2011 vs 2003 duty hour regulation‐compliant models on sleep duration, trainee education, and continuity of patient care among internal medicine house staff. JAMA Intern Med. 2013;173(8):649655.
  19. Lofgren RP, Gottlieb D, Williams RA, Rich EC. Post‐call transfer of resident responsibility: Its effect on patient care. J Gen Intern Med. 1990;5:501505.
  20. Schuberth JL, Elasy TA, Butler J, et al. Effect of short call admission on length of stay and quality of care for acute decompensated heart failure. Circulation. 2008;117:26372644.
References
  1. Reisenberg LA, Leitzsch J, Massucci JL, et al. Residents' and attending physicians' handoffs: a systematic review of the literature. Acad Med. 2009;84(12):17751787.
  2. Bernstein SL, Aronsky D, Duseja R, et al. The effect of emergency department crowding on clinically oriented outcomes. Acad Emerg Med. 2009;16:110.
  3. Rathlew NK, Chessare J, Olshaker J, et al. Time series analysis of variables associated with daily mean emergency department length of stay. Ann Emerg Med. 2007;49:265271.
  4. Howell E, Bessman E, Kravet S, et al. Active bed management by hospitalists and emergency department throughput. Ann Intern Med. 2008;149:804810.
  5. Society of Hospital Medicine. 2014 state of hospital medicine report. 2014:22.
  6. Epstein K, Juarez E, Epstein A, Loya K, Singer A. The impact of fragmentation of hospitalist care on length of stay. J Hosp Med. 2010;5:335338.
  7. O'Leary KJ, Turner J, Christensen N, et al. The effect of hospitalist discontinuity on adverse events. J Hosp Med. 2015;10:147151.
  8. Schaffer AC, Puopolo AL, Raman S, Kachalia A. Liability impact of the hospitalist model of care. J Hosp Med. 2014;9:750755.
  9. Wachter RM. Does continuity of care matter? No: discontinuity can improve patient care. West J Med. 2001;175(1):5.
  10. Bell D, Lambourne A, Percival F, Laverty AA, Ward DK. Consultant input in acute medical admissions and patient outcomes in hospitals in England: a multivariate analysis. PLoS One. 2013;8(4):e61476.
  11. Scott I, Vaughan L, Bell D. Effectiveness of acute medical units in hospitals: a systematic review. Int J Qual Health Care. 2009;21(6):397407.
  12. Smith GR, Stein J, Jones M. Acute medicine in the United Kingdom: first‐hand perspectives on a parallel evolution of inpatient medical care. J Hosp Med. 2012:7(3);254257.
  13. Liu V, Kipnis P, Rizk NW, et al. Adverse outcomes associated with delayed intensive care unit transfers in an integrated healthcare system. J Hosp Med. 2012;7(3):224230.
  14. Walraven C, Austin PC, Jennings A, Quan H, Forster AJ. A modification of the Elixhauser comorbidity measures into a point system for hospital death using administrative data. Med Care. 2009;47(6):626633.
  15. Elliott DJ, Young RS, Brice J, Agular R, Kolm P. Effect of hospitalist workload on the quality and efficiency of care. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(5):786793.
  16. Forster AJ, Stiell I, Wells G, Lee AJ, Walraven C. The effect of hospital occupancy on emergency department length of stay and patient disposition. Acad Emerg Med. 2003;10(2):127133.
  17. Firth D. Bias reduction of maximum likelihood estimates. Biometrika. 1993;80(1):2738.
  18. Desai S, Feldman L, Brown L, et al. Effect of the 2011 vs 2003 duty hour regulation‐compliant models on sleep duration, trainee education, and continuity of patient care among internal medicine house staff. JAMA Intern Med. 2013;173(8):649655.
  19. Lofgren RP, Gottlieb D, Williams RA, Rich EC. Post‐call transfer of resident responsibility: Its effect on patient care. J Gen Intern Med. 1990;5:501505.
  20. Schuberth JL, Elasy TA, Butler J, et al. Effect of short call admission on length of stay and quality of care for acute decompensated heart failure. Circulation. 2008;117:26372644.
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Address for correspondence and reprint requests: G. Randy Smith Jr., MD, Division of Hospital Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, 211 East Ontario Street, Suite 7‐713, Chicago, IL 60611; Telephone: 312‐926‐5893; Fax: 312‐926‐4588; E‐mail: [email protected]
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The authors reply “The effect of hospitalist continuity on adverse events”

We greatly appreciate the thoughtful points made by Dr. Kerman regarding our recently published study evaluating the association of hospitalist continuity on adverse events (AEs).[1] We agree that a 7‐on/7‐off staffing model may limit discontinuity relative to models using shorter rotations lengths. Many hospital medicine programs use a 7‐on/7‐off model to optimize continuity. Longer rotation lengths are uncommon, as they may lead to fatigue and negatively affect physician work‐life balance. Shorter rotation lengths do exist, and we acknowledge that a study in a setting with greater fragmentation may have detected an effect.

We respectfully disagree with Dr. Kerman's concern that our methods for AE detection and confirmation may have been insensitive. We did not rely on incident reports, as these systems suffer from under‐reporting and often represent only a fraction of true AEs. We used a modified version of the classic 2‐stage method to identify and confirm AEs.[2] In the first stage, we used computerized screens, based on criteria from the Harvard Medical Practice Study and Institute for Healthcare Improvement global trigger tool, to identify potential AEs.[3, 4, 5] A research nurse created narrative summaries of potential AEs. A physician researcher then reviewed the narrative summaries to confirm whether an AE was truly present. This time‐consuming method is much more sensitive and specific than other options for patient safety measurement, including administrative data analyses and incident reporting systems.[6, 7]

With respect to other outcomes that may be affected by hospitalist continuity, we recently published a separate study showing that lower inpatient physician continuity was significantly associated with modest increases in hospital costs.[8] We found no association between continuity and patient satisfaction, but were likely underpowered to detect one. Interestingly, some of the models in our study suggested a slightly reduced risk of readmission with lower continuity. We were surprised by this finding and hypothesized that countervailing forces may be at play during handoffs of care from 1 hospitalist to another. Transitions of care introduce the opportunity for critical information to be lost, but they also introduce the potential for patient reassessment. A hospitalist newly taking over care from another may not be anchored to the initial diagnostic impressions and management plan established by the first. Of course, the potential benefit of a reassessment could only occur if the new hospitalist has time to perform one. At extremely high patient volumes, this theoretical benefit is unlikely to exist.

We did not include length of stay (LOS) as an outcome because hospitalist continuity and LOS are interdependent. Although discontinuity may lead to longer LOS, longer LOS definitely increases the probability of discontinuity. Thus, we controlled for LOS in our statistical models to isolate the effect of continuity. The study by Epstein and colleagues did not take into account the interdependence between LOS and hospitalist continuity.[9] Observational studies are not ideal for determining the effect of continuity on LOS. The Combing Incentives and Continuity Leading to Efficiency (CICLE) study by Chandra and colleagues was a pre‐post evaluation of a hospitalist staffing model specifically designed to improve continuity.[10] In the CICLE model, physicians work in a 4‐day rotation. On day 1, physicians exclusively admit patients. On day 2, physicians care for patients admitted on day 1 and accept patients admitted overnight. On days 3 and 4, physicians continue to care for patients received on days 1 and 2, but receive no additional patients. The remaining patients are transitioned to the next physician entering the cycle at the end of day 4. Chandra and colleagues found a 7.5% reduction in LOS and an 8.5% reduction in charges. Interestingly, they also found a 13.5% increase in readmissions that did not achieve statistical significance (P=0.08). The CICLE study suggests continuity does affect LOS, but is limited in that it did not account for a potential preexisting trend toward lower LOS.

Dr. Kerman presents data showing that it takes longer for a physician to care for a patient who is new to him or her than for a patient who is previously known. This finding has face validity. However, as we have suggested, the extra time spent by the oncoming physician may have both advantages and disadvantages. The disadvantages include time‐consuming cognitive work for the physician and the potential for information loss affecting patient care. The potential advantage is a second physician reassessing the diagnosis and management decisions established by the first, potentially correcting errors and optimizing care.

Ultimately, more research is needed to illuminate the effect of hospitalist continuity on patient outcomes. For now, we feel that hospital medicine group leaders need not institute lengthy rotations or staffing models that prioritize continuity above all other factors, as continuity appears to have little impact on patient outcomes.

References
  1. O'Leary KJ, Turner J, Christensen N, et al. The effect of hospitalist discontinuity on adverse events. J Hosp Med. 2015;10(3):147151.
  2. O'Leary KJ, Devisetty VK, Patel AR, et al. Comparison of manual abstraction to data warehouse facilitated abstraction to identify hosptial adverse events. BMJ Qual Saf. 2013;22(2):130138.
  3. Griffin FA, Resar RK. IHI global trigger tool for measuring adverse events: IHI innovation series white paper. Cambridge, MA: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; 2007.
  4. Hiatt HH, Barnes BA, Brennan TA, et al. A study of medical injury and medical malpractice. N Engl J Med. 1989;321(7):480484.
  5. Thomas EJ, Studdert DM, Burstin HR, et al. Incidence and types of adverse events and negligent care in Utah and Colorado. Med Care. 2000;38(3):261271.
  6. Shojania KG. The elephant of patient safety: what you see depends on how you look. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2010;36(9):399401.
  7. Thomas EJ, Petersen LA. Measuring errors and adverse events in health care. J Gen Intern Med. 2003;18(1):6167.
  8. Turner J, Hansen L, Hinami K, et al. The impact of hospitalist discontinuity on hospital cost, readmissions, and patient satisfaction. J Gen Intern Med. 2014;29(7):10041008.
  9. Epstein K, Juarez E, Epstein A, Loya K, Singer A. The impact of fragmentation of hospitalist care on length of stay. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(6):335338.
  10. Chandra S, Wright SM, Howell EE. The Creating Incentives and Continuity Leading to Efficiency staffing model: a quality improvement initiative in hospital medicine. Mayo Clin Proc. 2012;87(4):364371.
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We greatly appreciate the thoughtful points made by Dr. Kerman regarding our recently published study evaluating the association of hospitalist continuity on adverse events (AEs).[1] We agree that a 7‐on/7‐off staffing model may limit discontinuity relative to models using shorter rotations lengths. Many hospital medicine programs use a 7‐on/7‐off model to optimize continuity. Longer rotation lengths are uncommon, as they may lead to fatigue and negatively affect physician work‐life balance. Shorter rotation lengths do exist, and we acknowledge that a study in a setting with greater fragmentation may have detected an effect.

We respectfully disagree with Dr. Kerman's concern that our methods for AE detection and confirmation may have been insensitive. We did not rely on incident reports, as these systems suffer from under‐reporting and often represent only a fraction of true AEs. We used a modified version of the classic 2‐stage method to identify and confirm AEs.[2] In the first stage, we used computerized screens, based on criteria from the Harvard Medical Practice Study and Institute for Healthcare Improvement global trigger tool, to identify potential AEs.[3, 4, 5] A research nurse created narrative summaries of potential AEs. A physician researcher then reviewed the narrative summaries to confirm whether an AE was truly present. This time‐consuming method is much more sensitive and specific than other options for patient safety measurement, including administrative data analyses and incident reporting systems.[6, 7]

With respect to other outcomes that may be affected by hospitalist continuity, we recently published a separate study showing that lower inpatient physician continuity was significantly associated with modest increases in hospital costs.[8] We found no association between continuity and patient satisfaction, but were likely underpowered to detect one. Interestingly, some of the models in our study suggested a slightly reduced risk of readmission with lower continuity. We were surprised by this finding and hypothesized that countervailing forces may be at play during handoffs of care from 1 hospitalist to another. Transitions of care introduce the opportunity for critical information to be lost, but they also introduce the potential for patient reassessment. A hospitalist newly taking over care from another may not be anchored to the initial diagnostic impressions and management plan established by the first. Of course, the potential benefit of a reassessment could only occur if the new hospitalist has time to perform one. At extremely high patient volumes, this theoretical benefit is unlikely to exist.

We did not include length of stay (LOS) as an outcome because hospitalist continuity and LOS are interdependent. Although discontinuity may lead to longer LOS, longer LOS definitely increases the probability of discontinuity. Thus, we controlled for LOS in our statistical models to isolate the effect of continuity. The study by Epstein and colleagues did not take into account the interdependence between LOS and hospitalist continuity.[9] Observational studies are not ideal for determining the effect of continuity on LOS. The Combing Incentives and Continuity Leading to Efficiency (CICLE) study by Chandra and colleagues was a pre‐post evaluation of a hospitalist staffing model specifically designed to improve continuity.[10] In the CICLE model, physicians work in a 4‐day rotation. On day 1, physicians exclusively admit patients. On day 2, physicians care for patients admitted on day 1 and accept patients admitted overnight. On days 3 and 4, physicians continue to care for patients received on days 1 and 2, but receive no additional patients. The remaining patients are transitioned to the next physician entering the cycle at the end of day 4. Chandra and colleagues found a 7.5% reduction in LOS and an 8.5% reduction in charges. Interestingly, they also found a 13.5% increase in readmissions that did not achieve statistical significance (P=0.08). The CICLE study suggests continuity does affect LOS, but is limited in that it did not account for a potential preexisting trend toward lower LOS.

Dr. Kerman presents data showing that it takes longer for a physician to care for a patient who is new to him or her than for a patient who is previously known. This finding has face validity. However, as we have suggested, the extra time spent by the oncoming physician may have both advantages and disadvantages. The disadvantages include time‐consuming cognitive work for the physician and the potential for information loss affecting patient care. The potential advantage is a second physician reassessing the diagnosis and management decisions established by the first, potentially correcting errors and optimizing care.

Ultimately, more research is needed to illuminate the effect of hospitalist continuity on patient outcomes. For now, we feel that hospital medicine group leaders need not institute lengthy rotations or staffing models that prioritize continuity above all other factors, as continuity appears to have little impact on patient outcomes.

We greatly appreciate the thoughtful points made by Dr. Kerman regarding our recently published study evaluating the association of hospitalist continuity on adverse events (AEs).[1] We agree that a 7‐on/7‐off staffing model may limit discontinuity relative to models using shorter rotations lengths. Many hospital medicine programs use a 7‐on/7‐off model to optimize continuity. Longer rotation lengths are uncommon, as they may lead to fatigue and negatively affect physician work‐life balance. Shorter rotation lengths do exist, and we acknowledge that a study in a setting with greater fragmentation may have detected an effect.

We respectfully disagree with Dr. Kerman's concern that our methods for AE detection and confirmation may have been insensitive. We did not rely on incident reports, as these systems suffer from under‐reporting and often represent only a fraction of true AEs. We used a modified version of the classic 2‐stage method to identify and confirm AEs.[2] In the first stage, we used computerized screens, based on criteria from the Harvard Medical Practice Study and Institute for Healthcare Improvement global trigger tool, to identify potential AEs.[3, 4, 5] A research nurse created narrative summaries of potential AEs. A physician researcher then reviewed the narrative summaries to confirm whether an AE was truly present. This time‐consuming method is much more sensitive and specific than other options for patient safety measurement, including administrative data analyses and incident reporting systems.[6, 7]

With respect to other outcomes that may be affected by hospitalist continuity, we recently published a separate study showing that lower inpatient physician continuity was significantly associated with modest increases in hospital costs.[8] We found no association between continuity and patient satisfaction, but were likely underpowered to detect one. Interestingly, some of the models in our study suggested a slightly reduced risk of readmission with lower continuity. We were surprised by this finding and hypothesized that countervailing forces may be at play during handoffs of care from 1 hospitalist to another. Transitions of care introduce the opportunity for critical information to be lost, but they also introduce the potential for patient reassessment. A hospitalist newly taking over care from another may not be anchored to the initial diagnostic impressions and management plan established by the first. Of course, the potential benefit of a reassessment could only occur if the new hospitalist has time to perform one. At extremely high patient volumes, this theoretical benefit is unlikely to exist.

We did not include length of stay (LOS) as an outcome because hospitalist continuity and LOS are interdependent. Although discontinuity may lead to longer LOS, longer LOS definitely increases the probability of discontinuity. Thus, we controlled for LOS in our statistical models to isolate the effect of continuity. The study by Epstein and colleagues did not take into account the interdependence between LOS and hospitalist continuity.[9] Observational studies are not ideal for determining the effect of continuity on LOS. The Combing Incentives and Continuity Leading to Efficiency (CICLE) study by Chandra and colleagues was a pre‐post evaluation of a hospitalist staffing model specifically designed to improve continuity.[10] In the CICLE model, physicians work in a 4‐day rotation. On day 1, physicians exclusively admit patients. On day 2, physicians care for patients admitted on day 1 and accept patients admitted overnight. On days 3 and 4, physicians continue to care for patients received on days 1 and 2, but receive no additional patients. The remaining patients are transitioned to the next physician entering the cycle at the end of day 4. Chandra and colleagues found a 7.5% reduction in LOS and an 8.5% reduction in charges. Interestingly, they also found a 13.5% increase in readmissions that did not achieve statistical significance (P=0.08). The CICLE study suggests continuity does affect LOS, but is limited in that it did not account for a potential preexisting trend toward lower LOS.

Dr. Kerman presents data showing that it takes longer for a physician to care for a patient who is new to him or her than for a patient who is previously known. This finding has face validity. However, as we have suggested, the extra time spent by the oncoming physician may have both advantages and disadvantages. The disadvantages include time‐consuming cognitive work for the physician and the potential for information loss affecting patient care. The potential advantage is a second physician reassessing the diagnosis and management decisions established by the first, potentially correcting errors and optimizing care.

Ultimately, more research is needed to illuminate the effect of hospitalist continuity on patient outcomes. For now, we feel that hospital medicine group leaders need not institute lengthy rotations or staffing models that prioritize continuity above all other factors, as continuity appears to have little impact on patient outcomes.

References
  1. O'Leary KJ, Turner J, Christensen N, et al. The effect of hospitalist discontinuity on adverse events. J Hosp Med. 2015;10(3):147151.
  2. O'Leary KJ, Devisetty VK, Patel AR, et al. Comparison of manual abstraction to data warehouse facilitated abstraction to identify hosptial adverse events. BMJ Qual Saf. 2013;22(2):130138.
  3. Griffin FA, Resar RK. IHI global trigger tool for measuring adverse events: IHI innovation series white paper. Cambridge, MA: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; 2007.
  4. Hiatt HH, Barnes BA, Brennan TA, et al. A study of medical injury and medical malpractice. N Engl J Med. 1989;321(7):480484.
  5. Thomas EJ, Studdert DM, Burstin HR, et al. Incidence and types of adverse events and negligent care in Utah and Colorado. Med Care. 2000;38(3):261271.
  6. Shojania KG. The elephant of patient safety: what you see depends on how you look. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2010;36(9):399401.
  7. Thomas EJ, Petersen LA. Measuring errors and adverse events in health care. J Gen Intern Med. 2003;18(1):6167.
  8. Turner J, Hansen L, Hinami K, et al. The impact of hospitalist discontinuity on hospital cost, readmissions, and patient satisfaction. J Gen Intern Med. 2014;29(7):10041008.
  9. Epstein K, Juarez E, Epstein A, Loya K, Singer A. The impact of fragmentation of hospitalist care on length of stay. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(6):335338.
  10. Chandra S, Wright SM, Howell EE. The Creating Incentives and Continuity Leading to Efficiency staffing model: a quality improvement initiative in hospital medicine. Mayo Clin Proc. 2012;87(4):364371.
References
  1. O'Leary KJ, Turner J, Christensen N, et al. The effect of hospitalist discontinuity on adverse events. J Hosp Med. 2015;10(3):147151.
  2. O'Leary KJ, Devisetty VK, Patel AR, et al. Comparison of manual abstraction to data warehouse facilitated abstraction to identify hosptial adverse events. BMJ Qual Saf. 2013;22(2):130138.
  3. Griffin FA, Resar RK. IHI global trigger tool for measuring adverse events: IHI innovation series white paper. Cambridge, MA: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; 2007.
  4. Hiatt HH, Barnes BA, Brennan TA, et al. A study of medical injury and medical malpractice. N Engl J Med. 1989;321(7):480484.
  5. Thomas EJ, Studdert DM, Burstin HR, et al. Incidence and types of adverse events and negligent care in Utah and Colorado. Med Care. 2000;38(3):261271.
  6. Shojania KG. The elephant of patient safety: what you see depends on how you look. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2010;36(9):399401.
  7. Thomas EJ, Petersen LA. Measuring errors and adverse events in health care. J Gen Intern Med. 2003;18(1):6167.
  8. Turner J, Hansen L, Hinami K, et al. The impact of hospitalist discontinuity on hospital cost, readmissions, and patient satisfaction. J Gen Intern Med. 2014;29(7):10041008.
  9. Epstein K, Juarez E, Epstein A, Loya K, Singer A. The impact of fragmentation of hospitalist care on length of stay. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(6):335338.
  10. Chandra S, Wright SM, Howell EE. The Creating Incentives and Continuity Leading to Efficiency staffing model: a quality improvement initiative in hospital medicine. Mayo Clin Proc. 2012;87(4):364371.
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Effect of Hospitalist Discontinuity on AE

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The effect of hospitalist discontinuity on adverse events

Although definitions vary, continuity of care can be thought of as the patient's experience of a continuous caring relationship with an identified healthcare professional.[1] Research in ambulatory settings has found that patients who see their primary care physician for a higher proportion of office visits have higher patient satisfaction, better hypertensive control, lower risk of hospitalization, and fewer emergency department visits.[2, 3, 4, 5] Continuity with a single hospital‐based physician is difficult to achieve because of the need to provide care 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Key clinical information may be lost during physician‐to‐physician handoffs (eg, at admission, at the end of rotations on service) during hospitalization. Our research group recently found that lower hospital physician continuity was associated with modestly increased hospital costs, but also a trend toward lower readmissions.[6] We speculated that physicians newly taking over patient care from colleagues reassess diagnoses and treatment plans. This reassessment may identify errors missed by the previous hospital physician. Thus, discontinuity may theoretically help or hinder the provision of safe hospital care.

We sought to examine the relationship between hospital physician continuity and the incidence of adverse events (AEs). We combined data from 2 previously published studies by our research group; one investigated the relationship between hospital physician continuity and costs and 30‐day readmissions, the other assessed the impact of unit‐based interventions on AEs.[6, 7]

METHODS

Setting and Study Design

This retrospective, observational study was conducted at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, an 876‐bed tertiary care teaching hospital in Chicago, Illinois, and was approved by the institutional review board of Northwestern University. Subjects included patients admitted to an adult nonteaching hospitalist service between March 1, 2009 and December 31, 2011. Hospitalists on this service worked without resident physicians in rotations usually lasting 7 consecutive days beginning on Mondays and ending on Sundays. Hospitalists were allowed to switch portions of their schedule with one another, creating the possibility that certain rotations may have been slightly shorter or longer than 7 days. Hospitalists gave verbal sign‐out via telephone to the hospitalist taking over their service on the afternoon of the last day of their rotation. These handoffs customarily involved both hospitalists viewing the electronic health record during the discussion but were not standardized. Night hospitalists performed admissions and cross‐coverage each night from 7 pm to 7 am. Night hospitalists printed history and physicals for day hospitalists, but typically did not give verbal sign‐out on new admissions.

Acquisition of Study Population Data

We identified all patients admitted to the nonteaching hospitalist service using the Northwestern Medicine Enterprise Data Warehouse (EDW), an integrated repository of all clinical and research data sources on the campus. We excluded patients admitted under observation status, those initially admitted to other services (eg, intensive care, general surgery), those discharged from other services, and those cared for by advanced practice providers (ie, nurse practitioners and physician assistants).

Predictor Variables

We identified physicians completing the primary service history and physicals (H&P) and progress notes throughout patients' hospitalizations to calculate 2 measures of continuity: the Number of Physicians Index (NPI), and the Usual Provider of Continuity (UPC) Index.[8, 9] The NPI represented the total number of unique hospitalists completing H&Ps and/or progress notes for a patient. The UPC was calculated as the largest number of notes signed by a single hospitalist divided by the total number of hospitalist notes for a patient. For example, if Dr. John Smith wrote notes on the first 4 days of a patient's hospital stay, and Dr. Mary Jones wrote notes on the following 2 days (total stay=6 days), the NPI would be 2 and the UPC would be 0.67. Therefore, higher NPI and lower UPC designate lower continuity. Significant events occurring during the nighttime were documented in separate notes titled cross‐cover notes. These cross‐cover notes were not included in the calculation of NPI or UPC. In the rare event that 2 or more progress notes were written on the same day, we selected the one used for billing to calculate UPC and NPI.

Outcome Variables

We used AE data from a study we conducted to assess the impact of unit‐based interventions to improve teamwork and patient safety, the methods of which have been previously described.[7] Briefly, we used a 2‐stage medical record review similar to that performed in prior studies.[10, 11, 12, 13] In the first stage, we identified potential AEs using automated queries of the Northwestern Medicine EDW. These queries were based on screening criteria used in the Harvard Medical Practice Study and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Global Trigger Tool.[12, 13] Examples of queries included abnormal laboratory values (eg, international normalized ratio [INR] >6 after hospital day 2 and excluding patients with INR >4 on day 1), administration of rescue medications (eg, naloxone), certain types of incident reports (eg, pressure ulcer), International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD‐9) codes indicating hospital‐acquired conditions (eg, venous thromboembolism), and text searches of progress notes and discharge summaries using natural language processing.[14] Prior research by our group confirmed these automated screens identify a similar number of AEs as manual medical record screening.[14] For each patient with 1 or more potential AE, a research nurse performed a medical record abstraction and created a description of each potential AE.

In the second stage, 2 physician researchers independently reviewed each potential AE in a blinded fashion to determine whether or not an AE was present. An AE was defined as injury due to medical management rather than the natural history of the illness,[15] and included injuries that prolonged the hospital stay or produced disability as well as those resulting in transient disability or abnormal lab values.[16] After independent review, physician reviewers discussed discrepancies in their ratings to achieve consensus.

We tested the reliability of medical record abstractions in our prior study by conducting duplicate abstractions and consensus ratings for a randomly selected sample of 294 patients.[7] The inter‐rater reliability was good for determining the presence of AEs (=0.63).

Statistical Analyses

We calculated descriptive statistics for patient characteristics. Primary discharge diagnosis ICD‐9 codes were categorized using the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Clinical Classification Software.[17] We created multivariable logistic regression models with the independent variable being the measure of continuity (NPI or UPC) and the dependent variable being experiencing 1 or more AEs. Covariates included patient age, sex, race, payer, night admission, weekend admission, intensive care unit stay, Medicare Severity Diagnosis Related Group (MS‐DRG) weight, and total number of Elixhauser comorbidities.[18] The length of stay (LOS) was also included as a covariate, as longer LOS increases the probability of discontinuity and may increase the risk for AEs. Because MS‐DRG weight and LOS were highly correlated, we created several models; the first including both as continuous variables, the second including both categorized into quartiles, and a third excluding MS‐DRG weight and including LOS as a continuous variable. Our prior study assessing the impact of unit‐based interventions did not show a statistically significant difference in the pre‐ versus postintervention period, thus we did not include study period as a covariate.

RESULTS

Patient Characteristics

Our analyses included data from 474 hospitalizations. Patient characteristics are shown in Table 1. Patients were a mean 51.118.8 years of age, hospitalized for a mean 3.43.1 days, included 241 (50.8%) women, and 233 (49.2%) persons of nonwhite race. The mean and standard deviation of NPI and UPC were 2.51.0 and 0.60.2. Overall, 47 patients (9.9%) experienced 55 total AEs. AEs included 31 adverse drug events, 6 falls, 5 procedural injuries, 4 manifestations of poor glycemic control, 3 hospital‐acquired infections, 2 episodes of acute renal failure, 1 episode of delirium, 1 pressure ulcer, and 2 categorized as other.

Patient and Hospitalization Characteristics (N=474)
CharacteristicValue
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: MS‐DRG, Medicare severity diagnosis‐related group; NPI, Number of Physicians Index; SD, standard deviation; UPC, Usual Provider of Care Index.

Mean age (SD), y55.1 (18.8)
Mean length of stay (SD), d3.4 (3.1)
Women, n (%)241 (50.8)
Nonwhite race, n (%)233 (49.2)
Payer, n (%)
Private180 (38)
Medicare165 (34.8)
Medicaid47 (9.9)
Self‐pay/other82 (17.3)
Night admission, n (%)245 (51.7)
Weekend admission, n (%)135 (28.5)
Intensive care unit stay, n (%)18 (3.8)
Diagnosis, n (%) 
Diseases of the circulatory system95 (20.0)
Diseases of the digestive system65 (13.7)
Diseases of the respiratory system49 (10.3)
Injury and poisoning41 (8.7)
Diseases of the skin and soft tissue31 (6.5)
Symptoms, signs, and ill‐defined conditions and factors influencing health status28 (5.9)
Endocrine, nutritional, and metabolic diseases and immunity disorders25 (5.3)
Diseases of the genitourinary system24 (5.1)
Diseases of the musculoskeletal system and connective tissue23 (4.9)
Diseases of the nervous system23 (4.9)
Other70 (14.8)
Mean no. of Elixhauser comorbidities (SD)2.3 (1.7)
Mean MS‐DRG weight (SD)1.0 (1.0)
Mean NPI (SD)2.5 (1.0)
Mean UPC (SD)0.6 (0.2)

Association Between Continuity and Adverse Events

In unadjusted models, each 1‐unit increase in the NPI (ie, less continuity) was significantly associated with the incidence of 1 or more AEs (odds ratio [OR]=1.75; P<0.001). However, UPC was not associated with incidence of AEs (OR=1.03; P=0.68) (Table 2). Across all adjusted models, neither NPI nor UPC was significantly associated with the incidence of AEs. The direction of the effect of discontinuity on AEs was inconsistent across models. Though all 3 adjusted models using NPI as the independent variable showed a trend toward increased odds of experiencing 1 or more AE with discontinuity, 2 of the 3 models using UPC showed trends in the opposite direction.

Effect of Decreased Continuity on Adverse Events
 NPI OR (95% CI)*P ValueUPC OR (95% CI)*P Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; LOS, length of stay; MS‐DRG, Medicare severity diagnosis‐related group; NPI, Number of Physicians Index; OR, odds ratio; UPC, Usual Provider Of Continuity Index. *NPI is the total number of unique hospitalist physicians. UPC is the largest number of encounters by a single hospitalist physician divided by the total number of hospitalist physician encounters for a patient. The OR for UPC reflects a 10% decrease.

Unadjusted model1.75 (1.332.29)<0.00011.03 (0.89‐1.21)0.68
Adjusted models    
Model 1MS‐DRG and LOS continuous1.16 (0.781.72)0.470.96 (0.791.14)0.60
Model 2MS‐DRG and LOS in quartiles1.38 (0.981.94)0.071.05 (0.881.26)0.59
Model 3MS‐DRG dropped, LOS continuous1.14 (0.771.70)0.510.95 (0.791.14)0.56

DISCUSSION

We found that hospitalist physician continuity was not associated with the incidence of AEs. Our findings are somewhat surprising because of the high value placed on continuity of care and patient safety concerns related to handoffs. Key clinical information may be lost when patient care is transitioned to a new hospitalist shortly after admission (eg, from a night hospitalist) or at the end of a rotation. Thus, it is logical to assume that discontinuity inherently increases the risk for harm. On the other hand, a physician newly taking over patient care from another may not be anchored to the initial diagnosis and treatment plan established by the first. This second look could potentially prevent missed/delayed diagnoses and optimize the plan of care.[19] These countervailing forces may explain our findings.

Several other potential explanations for our findings should be considered. First, the quality of handoffs may have been sufficient to overcome the potential for information loss. We feel this is unlikely given that little attention had been dedicated to improving the quality of patient handoffs among hospitalists in our institution. Notably, though a number of studies have evaluated resident physician handoffs, most of the work has focused on night coverage, and little is known about the quality of attending handoffs.[20] Second, access to a fully integrated electronic health record may have assisted hospitalists in complementing information received during handoffs. For example, a hospitalist about to start his or her rotation may have remotely accessed and reviewed patient medical records prior to receiving the phone handoff from the outgoing hospitalist. Third, other efforts to improve patient safety may have reduced the overall risk and provided some resilience in the system. Unit‐based interventions, including structured interdisciplinary rounds and nurse‐physician coleadership, improved teamwork climate and reduced AEs in the study hospital over time.[7]

Another factor to consider relates to the fact that hospital care is provided by teams of clinicians (eg, nurses, specialist physicians, therapists, social workers). Hospital teams are often large and have dynamic team membership. Similar to hospitalists, nurses, physician specialists, and other team members handoff care throughout the course of a patient's hospital stay. Yet, discontinuity for each professional type may occur at different times and frequencies. For example, a patient may be handed off from one hospitalist to another, yet the care continues with the same cardiologist or nurse. Future research should better characterize hospital team complexity (eg, size, relationships among members) and dynamics (eg, continuity for various professional types) and the impact of these factors on patient outcomes.

Our findings are important because hospitalist physician discontinuity is common during hospital stays. Hospital medicine groups vary in their staffing and scheduling models. Policies related to admission distribution and rotation length (consecutive days worked) systematically impact physician continuity. Few studies have evaluated the effect on continuity on hospitalized patient outcomes, and no prior research, to our knowledge, has explored the association of continuity on measures of patient safety.[6, 21, 22] Though our study might suggest that staffing models have little impact on patient safety, as previously mentioned, other team factors may influence patient outcomes.

Our study has several limitations. First, we assessed the impact of continuity on AEs in a single site. Although the 7 days on/7 days off model is the most common scheduling pattern used by adult hospital medicine groups,[23] staffing models and patient safety practices vary across hospitals, potentially limiting the generalizability of our study. Second, continuity can be defined and measured in a variety of ways. We used 2 different measures of physician continuity. As previously mentioned, assessing continuity of other clinicians may allow for a more complete understanding of the potential problems related to fragmentation of care. Third, this study excluded patients who experienced care transitions from other hospitals or other units within the hospital. Patients transferred from other hospitals are often complex, severely ill, and may be at higher risk for loss of key clinical information. Fourth, we used automated screens of an EDW to identify potential AEs. Although our prior research found that this method identified a similar number of AEs as manual medical record review screening, there was poor agreement between the 2 methods. Unfortunately, there is no gold standard to identify AEs. The EDW‐facilitated method allowed us to feasibly screen a larger number of charts, increasing statistical power, and minimized any potential bias that might occur during a manual review to identify potential AEs. Finally, we used data available from 2 prior studies and may have been underpowered to detect a significant association between continuity and AEs due to the relatively low percentage of patients experiencing an AE. In a post hoc power calculation, we estimated that we had 70% power to detect a 33% change in the proportion of patients with 1 or more AE for each 1‐unit increase in NPI, and 80% power to detect a 20% change for each 0.1‐unit decrease in UPC.

CONCLUSION

In conclusion, we found that hospitalist physician continuity was not associated with the incidence of AEs. We speculate that hospitalist continuity is only 1 of many team factors that may influence patient safety, and that prior efforts within our institution may have reduced our ability to detect an association. Future research should better characterize hospital team complexity and dynamics and the impact of these factors on patient outcomes.

Disclosures

This project was supported by a grant from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and an Excellence in Academic Medicine Award, administered by Northwestern Memorial Hospital. The authors report no conflicts of interest.

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References
  1. Gulliford M, Naithani S, Morgan M. What is “continuity of care”? J Health Serv Res Policy. 2006;11:248250.
  2. Saultz JW, Lochner J. Interpersonal continuity of care and care outcomes: a critical review. Ann Fam Med. 2005;3:159166.
  3. Walraven C, Oake N, Jennings A, Forster AJ. The association between continuity of care and outcomes: a systematic and critical review. J Eval Clin Pract. 2010;16:947956.
  4. Saultz JW, Albedaiwi W. Interpersonal continuity of care and patient satisfaction: a critical review. Ann Fam Med. 2004;2:445451.
  5. Blankfield RP, Kelly RB, Alemagno SA, King CM. Continuity of care in a family practice residency program. Impact on physician satisfaction. J Fam Pract. 1990;31:6973.
  6. Turner J, Hansen L, Hinami K, et al. The impact of hospitalist discontinuity on hospital cost, readmissions, and patient satisfaction. J Gen Intern Med. 2014;29:10041008.
  7. O'Leary KJ, Creden AJ, Slade ME, et al. Implementation of unit‐based interventions to improve teamwork and patient safety on a medical service [published online ahead of print June 11, 2014]. Am J Med Qual. doi: 10.1177/1062860614538093.
  8. Steinwachs DM. Measuring provider continuity in ambulatory care: an assessment of alternative approaches. Med Care. 1979;17:551565.
  9. Saultz JW. Defining and measuring interpersonal continuity of care. Ann Fam Med. 2003;1:134143.
  10. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Adverse events in hospitals: national incidence among medical beneficiaries. Available at: http://psnet.ahrq.gov/resource.aspx?resourceID=19811. Published November 2010. Accessed on December 15, 2014.
  11. Classen DC, Resar R, Griffin F, et al. “Global trigger tool” shows that adverse events in hospitals may be ten times greater than previously measured. Health Aff (Millwood). 2011;30:581589.
  12. Hiatt HH, Barnes BA, Brennan TA, et al. A study of medical injury and medical malpractice. N Engl J Med. 1989;321:480484.
  13. Thomas EJ, Studdert DM, Burstin HR, et al. Incidence and types of adverse events and negligent care in Utah and Colorado. Med Care. 2000;38:261271.
  14. O'Leary KJ, Devisetty VK, Patel AR, et al. Comparison of traditional trigger tool to data warehouse based screening for identifying hospital adverse events. BMJ Qual Saf. 2013;22:130138.
  15. Brennan TA, Leape LL, Laird NM, et al. Incidence of adverse events and negligence in hospitalized patients. Results of the Harvard Medical Practice Study I. N Engl J Med. 1991;324:370376.
  16. Stelfox HT, Bates DW, Redelmeier DA. Safety of patients isolated for infection control. JAMA. 2003;290:18991905.
  17. HCUP Clinical Classification Software. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/toolssoftware/ccs/ccs.jsp. Accessed on December 15, 2014.
  18. Elixhauser A, Steiner C, Harris DR, Coffey RM. Comorbidity measures for use with administrative data. Med Care. 1998;36:827.
  19. Wachter RM. Does continuity of care matter? No: discontinuity can improve patient care. West J Med. 2001;175:5.
  20. Arora VM, Manjarrez E, Dressler DD, Basaviah P, Halasyamani L, Kripalani S. Hospitalist handoffs: a systematic review and task force recommendations. J Hosp Med. 2009;4:433440.
  21. Epstein K, Juarez E, Epstein A, Loya K, Singer A. The impact of fragmentation of hospitalist care on length of stay. J Hosp Med. 2010;5:335338.
  22. Chandra S, Wright SM, Howell EE. The Creating Incentives and Continuity Leading to Efficiency staffing model: a quality improvement initiative in hospital medicine. Mayo Clin Proc. 2012;87:364371.
  23. Society of Hospital Medicine. 2014 state of hospital medicine report. Philadelphia, PA: Society of Hospital Medicine; 2014.
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Although definitions vary, continuity of care can be thought of as the patient's experience of a continuous caring relationship with an identified healthcare professional.[1] Research in ambulatory settings has found that patients who see their primary care physician for a higher proportion of office visits have higher patient satisfaction, better hypertensive control, lower risk of hospitalization, and fewer emergency department visits.[2, 3, 4, 5] Continuity with a single hospital‐based physician is difficult to achieve because of the need to provide care 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Key clinical information may be lost during physician‐to‐physician handoffs (eg, at admission, at the end of rotations on service) during hospitalization. Our research group recently found that lower hospital physician continuity was associated with modestly increased hospital costs, but also a trend toward lower readmissions.[6] We speculated that physicians newly taking over patient care from colleagues reassess diagnoses and treatment plans. This reassessment may identify errors missed by the previous hospital physician. Thus, discontinuity may theoretically help or hinder the provision of safe hospital care.

We sought to examine the relationship between hospital physician continuity and the incidence of adverse events (AEs). We combined data from 2 previously published studies by our research group; one investigated the relationship between hospital physician continuity and costs and 30‐day readmissions, the other assessed the impact of unit‐based interventions on AEs.[6, 7]

METHODS

Setting and Study Design

This retrospective, observational study was conducted at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, an 876‐bed tertiary care teaching hospital in Chicago, Illinois, and was approved by the institutional review board of Northwestern University. Subjects included patients admitted to an adult nonteaching hospitalist service between March 1, 2009 and December 31, 2011. Hospitalists on this service worked without resident physicians in rotations usually lasting 7 consecutive days beginning on Mondays and ending on Sundays. Hospitalists were allowed to switch portions of their schedule with one another, creating the possibility that certain rotations may have been slightly shorter or longer than 7 days. Hospitalists gave verbal sign‐out via telephone to the hospitalist taking over their service on the afternoon of the last day of their rotation. These handoffs customarily involved both hospitalists viewing the electronic health record during the discussion but were not standardized. Night hospitalists performed admissions and cross‐coverage each night from 7 pm to 7 am. Night hospitalists printed history and physicals for day hospitalists, but typically did not give verbal sign‐out on new admissions.

Acquisition of Study Population Data

We identified all patients admitted to the nonteaching hospitalist service using the Northwestern Medicine Enterprise Data Warehouse (EDW), an integrated repository of all clinical and research data sources on the campus. We excluded patients admitted under observation status, those initially admitted to other services (eg, intensive care, general surgery), those discharged from other services, and those cared for by advanced practice providers (ie, nurse practitioners and physician assistants).

Predictor Variables

We identified physicians completing the primary service history and physicals (H&P) and progress notes throughout patients' hospitalizations to calculate 2 measures of continuity: the Number of Physicians Index (NPI), and the Usual Provider of Continuity (UPC) Index.[8, 9] The NPI represented the total number of unique hospitalists completing H&Ps and/or progress notes for a patient. The UPC was calculated as the largest number of notes signed by a single hospitalist divided by the total number of hospitalist notes for a patient. For example, if Dr. John Smith wrote notes on the first 4 days of a patient's hospital stay, and Dr. Mary Jones wrote notes on the following 2 days (total stay=6 days), the NPI would be 2 and the UPC would be 0.67. Therefore, higher NPI and lower UPC designate lower continuity. Significant events occurring during the nighttime were documented in separate notes titled cross‐cover notes. These cross‐cover notes were not included in the calculation of NPI or UPC. In the rare event that 2 or more progress notes were written on the same day, we selected the one used for billing to calculate UPC and NPI.

Outcome Variables

We used AE data from a study we conducted to assess the impact of unit‐based interventions to improve teamwork and patient safety, the methods of which have been previously described.[7] Briefly, we used a 2‐stage medical record review similar to that performed in prior studies.[10, 11, 12, 13] In the first stage, we identified potential AEs using automated queries of the Northwestern Medicine EDW. These queries were based on screening criteria used in the Harvard Medical Practice Study and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Global Trigger Tool.[12, 13] Examples of queries included abnormal laboratory values (eg, international normalized ratio [INR] >6 after hospital day 2 and excluding patients with INR >4 on day 1), administration of rescue medications (eg, naloxone), certain types of incident reports (eg, pressure ulcer), International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD‐9) codes indicating hospital‐acquired conditions (eg, venous thromboembolism), and text searches of progress notes and discharge summaries using natural language processing.[14] Prior research by our group confirmed these automated screens identify a similar number of AEs as manual medical record screening.[14] For each patient with 1 or more potential AE, a research nurse performed a medical record abstraction and created a description of each potential AE.

In the second stage, 2 physician researchers independently reviewed each potential AE in a blinded fashion to determine whether or not an AE was present. An AE was defined as injury due to medical management rather than the natural history of the illness,[15] and included injuries that prolonged the hospital stay or produced disability as well as those resulting in transient disability or abnormal lab values.[16] After independent review, physician reviewers discussed discrepancies in their ratings to achieve consensus.

We tested the reliability of medical record abstractions in our prior study by conducting duplicate abstractions and consensus ratings for a randomly selected sample of 294 patients.[7] The inter‐rater reliability was good for determining the presence of AEs (=0.63).

Statistical Analyses

We calculated descriptive statistics for patient characteristics. Primary discharge diagnosis ICD‐9 codes were categorized using the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Clinical Classification Software.[17] We created multivariable logistic regression models with the independent variable being the measure of continuity (NPI or UPC) and the dependent variable being experiencing 1 or more AEs. Covariates included patient age, sex, race, payer, night admission, weekend admission, intensive care unit stay, Medicare Severity Diagnosis Related Group (MS‐DRG) weight, and total number of Elixhauser comorbidities.[18] The length of stay (LOS) was also included as a covariate, as longer LOS increases the probability of discontinuity and may increase the risk for AEs. Because MS‐DRG weight and LOS were highly correlated, we created several models; the first including both as continuous variables, the second including both categorized into quartiles, and a third excluding MS‐DRG weight and including LOS as a continuous variable. Our prior study assessing the impact of unit‐based interventions did not show a statistically significant difference in the pre‐ versus postintervention period, thus we did not include study period as a covariate.

RESULTS

Patient Characteristics

Our analyses included data from 474 hospitalizations. Patient characteristics are shown in Table 1. Patients were a mean 51.118.8 years of age, hospitalized for a mean 3.43.1 days, included 241 (50.8%) women, and 233 (49.2%) persons of nonwhite race. The mean and standard deviation of NPI and UPC were 2.51.0 and 0.60.2. Overall, 47 patients (9.9%) experienced 55 total AEs. AEs included 31 adverse drug events, 6 falls, 5 procedural injuries, 4 manifestations of poor glycemic control, 3 hospital‐acquired infections, 2 episodes of acute renal failure, 1 episode of delirium, 1 pressure ulcer, and 2 categorized as other.

Patient and Hospitalization Characteristics (N=474)
CharacteristicValue
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: MS‐DRG, Medicare severity diagnosis‐related group; NPI, Number of Physicians Index; SD, standard deviation; UPC, Usual Provider of Care Index.

Mean age (SD), y55.1 (18.8)
Mean length of stay (SD), d3.4 (3.1)
Women, n (%)241 (50.8)
Nonwhite race, n (%)233 (49.2)
Payer, n (%)
Private180 (38)
Medicare165 (34.8)
Medicaid47 (9.9)
Self‐pay/other82 (17.3)
Night admission, n (%)245 (51.7)
Weekend admission, n (%)135 (28.5)
Intensive care unit stay, n (%)18 (3.8)
Diagnosis, n (%) 
Diseases of the circulatory system95 (20.0)
Diseases of the digestive system65 (13.7)
Diseases of the respiratory system49 (10.3)
Injury and poisoning41 (8.7)
Diseases of the skin and soft tissue31 (6.5)
Symptoms, signs, and ill‐defined conditions and factors influencing health status28 (5.9)
Endocrine, nutritional, and metabolic diseases and immunity disorders25 (5.3)
Diseases of the genitourinary system24 (5.1)
Diseases of the musculoskeletal system and connective tissue23 (4.9)
Diseases of the nervous system23 (4.9)
Other70 (14.8)
Mean no. of Elixhauser comorbidities (SD)2.3 (1.7)
Mean MS‐DRG weight (SD)1.0 (1.0)
Mean NPI (SD)2.5 (1.0)
Mean UPC (SD)0.6 (0.2)

Association Between Continuity and Adverse Events

In unadjusted models, each 1‐unit increase in the NPI (ie, less continuity) was significantly associated with the incidence of 1 or more AEs (odds ratio [OR]=1.75; P<0.001). However, UPC was not associated with incidence of AEs (OR=1.03; P=0.68) (Table 2). Across all adjusted models, neither NPI nor UPC was significantly associated with the incidence of AEs. The direction of the effect of discontinuity on AEs was inconsistent across models. Though all 3 adjusted models using NPI as the independent variable showed a trend toward increased odds of experiencing 1 or more AE with discontinuity, 2 of the 3 models using UPC showed trends in the opposite direction.

Effect of Decreased Continuity on Adverse Events
 NPI OR (95% CI)*P ValueUPC OR (95% CI)*P Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; LOS, length of stay; MS‐DRG, Medicare severity diagnosis‐related group; NPI, Number of Physicians Index; OR, odds ratio; UPC, Usual Provider Of Continuity Index. *NPI is the total number of unique hospitalist physicians. UPC is the largest number of encounters by a single hospitalist physician divided by the total number of hospitalist physician encounters for a patient. The OR for UPC reflects a 10% decrease.

Unadjusted model1.75 (1.332.29)<0.00011.03 (0.89‐1.21)0.68
Adjusted models    
Model 1MS‐DRG and LOS continuous1.16 (0.781.72)0.470.96 (0.791.14)0.60
Model 2MS‐DRG and LOS in quartiles1.38 (0.981.94)0.071.05 (0.881.26)0.59
Model 3MS‐DRG dropped, LOS continuous1.14 (0.771.70)0.510.95 (0.791.14)0.56

DISCUSSION

We found that hospitalist physician continuity was not associated with the incidence of AEs. Our findings are somewhat surprising because of the high value placed on continuity of care and patient safety concerns related to handoffs. Key clinical information may be lost when patient care is transitioned to a new hospitalist shortly after admission (eg, from a night hospitalist) or at the end of a rotation. Thus, it is logical to assume that discontinuity inherently increases the risk for harm. On the other hand, a physician newly taking over patient care from another may not be anchored to the initial diagnosis and treatment plan established by the first. This second look could potentially prevent missed/delayed diagnoses and optimize the plan of care.[19] These countervailing forces may explain our findings.

Several other potential explanations for our findings should be considered. First, the quality of handoffs may have been sufficient to overcome the potential for information loss. We feel this is unlikely given that little attention had been dedicated to improving the quality of patient handoffs among hospitalists in our institution. Notably, though a number of studies have evaluated resident physician handoffs, most of the work has focused on night coverage, and little is known about the quality of attending handoffs.[20] Second, access to a fully integrated electronic health record may have assisted hospitalists in complementing information received during handoffs. For example, a hospitalist about to start his or her rotation may have remotely accessed and reviewed patient medical records prior to receiving the phone handoff from the outgoing hospitalist. Third, other efforts to improve patient safety may have reduced the overall risk and provided some resilience in the system. Unit‐based interventions, including structured interdisciplinary rounds and nurse‐physician coleadership, improved teamwork climate and reduced AEs in the study hospital over time.[7]

Another factor to consider relates to the fact that hospital care is provided by teams of clinicians (eg, nurses, specialist physicians, therapists, social workers). Hospital teams are often large and have dynamic team membership. Similar to hospitalists, nurses, physician specialists, and other team members handoff care throughout the course of a patient's hospital stay. Yet, discontinuity for each professional type may occur at different times and frequencies. For example, a patient may be handed off from one hospitalist to another, yet the care continues with the same cardiologist or nurse. Future research should better characterize hospital team complexity (eg, size, relationships among members) and dynamics (eg, continuity for various professional types) and the impact of these factors on patient outcomes.

Our findings are important because hospitalist physician discontinuity is common during hospital stays. Hospital medicine groups vary in their staffing and scheduling models. Policies related to admission distribution and rotation length (consecutive days worked) systematically impact physician continuity. Few studies have evaluated the effect on continuity on hospitalized patient outcomes, and no prior research, to our knowledge, has explored the association of continuity on measures of patient safety.[6, 21, 22] Though our study might suggest that staffing models have little impact on patient safety, as previously mentioned, other team factors may influence patient outcomes.

Our study has several limitations. First, we assessed the impact of continuity on AEs in a single site. Although the 7 days on/7 days off model is the most common scheduling pattern used by adult hospital medicine groups,[23] staffing models and patient safety practices vary across hospitals, potentially limiting the generalizability of our study. Second, continuity can be defined and measured in a variety of ways. We used 2 different measures of physician continuity. As previously mentioned, assessing continuity of other clinicians may allow for a more complete understanding of the potential problems related to fragmentation of care. Third, this study excluded patients who experienced care transitions from other hospitals or other units within the hospital. Patients transferred from other hospitals are often complex, severely ill, and may be at higher risk for loss of key clinical information. Fourth, we used automated screens of an EDW to identify potential AEs. Although our prior research found that this method identified a similar number of AEs as manual medical record review screening, there was poor agreement between the 2 methods. Unfortunately, there is no gold standard to identify AEs. The EDW‐facilitated method allowed us to feasibly screen a larger number of charts, increasing statistical power, and minimized any potential bias that might occur during a manual review to identify potential AEs. Finally, we used data available from 2 prior studies and may have been underpowered to detect a significant association between continuity and AEs due to the relatively low percentage of patients experiencing an AE. In a post hoc power calculation, we estimated that we had 70% power to detect a 33% change in the proportion of patients with 1 or more AE for each 1‐unit increase in NPI, and 80% power to detect a 20% change for each 0.1‐unit decrease in UPC.

CONCLUSION

In conclusion, we found that hospitalist physician continuity was not associated with the incidence of AEs. We speculate that hospitalist continuity is only 1 of many team factors that may influence patient safety, and that prior efforts within our institution may have reduced our ability to detect an association. Future research should better characterize hospital team complexity and dynamics and the impact of these factors on patient outcomes.

Disclosures

This project was supported by a grant from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and an Excellence in Academic Medicine Award, administered by Northwestern Memorial Hospital. The authors report no conflicts of interest.

Although definitions vary, continuity of care can be thought of as the patient's experience of a continuous caring relationship with an identified healthcare professional.[1] Research in ambulatory settings has found that patients who see their primary care physician for a higher proportion of office visits have higher patient satisfaction, better hypertensive control, lower risk of hospitalization, and fewer emergency department visits.[2, 3, 4, 5] Continuity with a single hospital‐based physician is difficult to achieve because of the need to provide care 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Key clinical information may be lost during physician‐to‐physician handoffs (eg, at admission, at the end of rotations on service) during hospitalization. Our research group recently found that lower hospital physician continuity was associated with modestly increased hospital costs, but also a trend toward lower readmissions.[6] We speculated that physicians newly taking over patient care from colleagues reassess diagnoses and treatment plans. This reassessment may identify errors missed by the previous hospital physician. Thus, discontinuity may theoretically help or hinder the provision of safe hospital care.

We sought to examine the relationship between hospital physician continuity and the incidence of adverse events (AEs). We combined data from 2 previously published studies by our research group; one investigated the relationship between hospital physician continuity and costs and 30‐day readmissions, the other assessed the impact of unit‐based interventions on AEs.[6, 7]

METHODS

Setting and Study Design

This retrospective, observational study was conducted at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, an 876‐bed tertiary care teaching hospital in Chicago, Illinois, and was approved by the institutional review board of Northwestern University. Subjects included patients admitted to an adult nonteaching hospitalist service between March 1, 2009 and December 31, 2011. Hospitalists on this service worked without resident physicians in rotations usually lasting 7 consecutive days beginning on Mondays and ending on Sundays. Hospitalists were allowed to switch portions of their schedule with one another, creating the possibility that certain rotations may have been slightly shorter or longer than 7 days. Hospitalists gave verbal sign‐out via telephone to the hospitalist taking over their service on the afternoon of the last day of their rotation. These handoffs customarily involved both hospitalists viewing the electronic health record during the discussion but were not standardized. Night hospitalists performed admissions and cross‐coverage each night from 7 pm to 7 am. Night hospitalists printed history and physicals for day hospitalists, but typically did not give verbal sign‐out on new admissions.

Acquisition of Study Population Data

We identified all patients admitted to the nonteaching hospitalist service using the Northwestern Medicine Enterprise Data Warehouse (EDW), an integrated repository of all clinical and research data sources on the campus. We excluded patients admitted under observation status, those initially admitted to other services (eg, intensive care, general surgery), those discharged from other services, and those cared for by advanced practice providers (ie, nurse practitioners and physician assistants).

Predictor Variables

We identified physicians completing the primary service history and physicals (H&P) and progress notes throughout patients' hospitalizations to calculate 2 measures of continuity: the Number of Physicians Index (NPI), and the Usual Provider of Continuity (UPC) Index.[8, 9] The NPI represented the total number of unique hospitalists completing H&Ps and/or progress notes for a patient. The UPC was calculated as the largest number of notes signed by a single hospitalist divided by the total number of hospitalist notes for a patient. For example, if Dr. John Smith wrote notes on the first 4 days of a patient's hospital stay, and Dr. Mary Jones wrote notes on the following 2 days (total stay=6 days), the NPI would be 2 and the UPC would be 0.67. Therefore, higher NPI and lower UPC designate lower continuity. Significant events occurring during the nighttime were documented in separate notes titled cross‐cover notes. These cross‐cover notes were not included in the calculation of NPI or UPC. In the rare event that 2 or more progress notes were written on the same day, we selected the one used for billing to calculate UPC and NPI.

Outcome Variables

We used AE data from a study we conducted to assess the impact of unit‐based interventions to improve teamwork and patient safety, the methods of which have been previously described.[7] Briefly, we used a 2‐stage medical record review similar to that performed in prior studies.[10, 11, 12, 13] In the first stage, we identified potential AEs using automated queries of the Northwestern Medicine EDW. These queries were based on screening criteria used in the Harvard Medical Practice Study and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) Global Trigger Tool.[12, 13] Examples of queries included abnormal laboratory values (eg, international normalized ratio [INR] >6 after hospital day 2 and excluding patients with INR >4 on day 1), administration of rescue medications (eg, naloxone), certain types of incident reports (eg, pressure ulcer), International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD‐9) codes indicating hospital‐acquired conditions (eg, venous thromboembolism), and text searches of progress notes and discharge summaries using natural language processing.[14] Prior research by our group confirmed these automated screens identify a similar number of AEs as manual medical record screening.[14] For each patient with 1 or more potential AE, a research nurse performed a medical record abstraction and created a description of each potential AE.

In the second stage, 2 physician researchers independently reviewed each potential AE in a blinded fashion to determine whether or not an AE was present. An AE was defined as injury due to medical management rather than the natural history of the illness,[15] and included injuries that prolonged the hospital stay or produced disability as well as those resulting in transient disability or abnormal lab values.[16] After independent review, physician reviewers discussed discrepancies in their ratings to achieve consensus.

We tested the reliability of medical record abstractions in our prior study by conducting duplicate abstractions and consensus ratings for a randomly selected sample of 294 patients.[7] The inter‐rater reliability was good for determining the presence of AEs (=0.63).

Statistical Analyses

We calculated descriptive statistics for patient characteristics. Primary discharge diagnosis ICD‐9 codes were categorized using the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Clinical Classification Software.[17] We created multivariable logistic regression models with the independent variable being the measure of continuity (NPI or UPC) and the dependent variable being experiencing 1 or more AEs. Covariates included patient age, sex, race, payer, night admission, weekend admission, intensive care unit stay, Medicare Severity Diagnosis Related Group (MS‐DRG) weight, and total number of Elixhauser comorbidities.[18] The length of stay (LOS) was also included as a covariate, as longer LOS increases the probability of discontinuity and may increase the risk for AEs. Because MS‐DRG weight and LOS were highly correlated, we created several models; the first including both as continuous variables, the second including both categorized into quartiles, and a third excluding MS‐DRG weight and including LOS as a continuous variable. Our prior study assessing the impact of unit‐based interventions did not show a statistically significant difference in the pre‐ versus postintervention period, thus we did not include study period as a covariate.

RESULTS

Patient Characteristics

Our analyses included data from 474 hospitalizations. Patient characteristics are shown in Table 1. Patients were a mean 51.118.8 years of age, hospitalized for a mean 3.43.1 days, included 241 (50.8%) women, and 233 (49.2%) persons of nonwhite race. The mean and standard deviation of NPI and UPC were 2.51.0 and 0.60.2. Overall, 47 patients (9.9%) experienced 55 total AEs. AEs included 31 adverse drug events, 6 falls, 5 procedural injuries, 4 manifestations of poor glycemic control, 3 hospital‐acquired infections, 2 episodes of acute renal failure, 1 episode of delirium, 1 pressure ulcer, and 2 categorized as other.

Patient and Hospitalization Characteristics (N=474)
CharacteristicValue
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: MS‐DRG, Medicare severity diagnosis‐related group; NPI, Number of Physicians Index; SD, standard deviation; UPC, Usual Provider of Care Index.

Mean age (SD), y55.1 (18.8)
Mean length of stay (SD), d3.4 (3.1)
Women, n (%)241 (50.8)
Nonwhite race, n (%)233 (49.2)
Payer, n (%)
Private180 (38)
Medicare165 (34.8)
Medicaid47 (9.9)
Self‐pay/other82 (17.3)
Night admission, n (%)245 (51.7)
Weekend admission, n (%)135 (28.5)
Intensive care unit stay, n (%)18 (3.8)
Diagnosis, n (%) 
Diseases of the circulatory system95 (20.0)
Diseases of the digestive system65 (13.7)
Diseases of the respiratory system49 (10.3)
Injury and poisoning41 (8.7)
Diseases of the skin and soft tissue31 (6.5)
Symptoms, signs, and ill‐defined conditions and factors influencing health status28 (5.9)
Endocrine, nutritional, and metabolic diseases and immunity disorders25 (5.3)
Diseases of the genitourinary system24 (5.1)
Diseases of the musculoskeletal system and connective tissue23 (4.9)
Diseases of the nervous system23 (4.9)
Other70 (14.8)
Mean no. of Elixhauser comorbidities (SD)2.3 (1.7)
Mean MS‐DRG weight (SD)1.0 (1.0)
Mean NPI (SD)2.5 (1.0)
Mean UPC (SD)0.6 (0.2)

Association Between Continuity and Adverse Events

In unadjusted models, each 1‐unit increase in the NPI (ie, less continuity) was significantly associated with the incidence of 1 or more AEs (odds ratio [OR]=1.75; P<0.001). However, UPC was not associated with incidence of AEs (OR=1.03; P=0.68) (Table 2). Across all adjusted models, neither NPI nor UPC was significantly associated with the incidence of AEs. The direction of the effect of discontinuity on AEs was inconsistent across models. Though all 3 adjusted models using NPI as the independent variable showed a trend toward increased odds of experiencing 1 or more AE with discontinuity, 2 of the 3 models using UPC showed trends in the opposite direction.

Effect of Decreased Continuity on Adverse Events
 NPI OR (95% CI)*P ValueUPC OR (95% CI)*P Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; LOS, length of stay; MS‐DRG, Medicare severity diagnosis‐related group; NPI, Number of Physicians Index; OR, odds ratio; UPC, Usual Provider Of Continuity Index. *NPI is the total number of unique hospitalist physicians. UPC is the largest number of encounters by a single hospitalist physician divided by the total number of hospitalist physician encounters for a patient. The OR for UPC reflects a 10% decrease.

Unadjusted model1.75 (1.332.29)<0.00011.03 (0.89‐1.21)0.68
Adjusted models    
Model 1MS‐DRG and LOS continuous1.16 (0.781.72)0.470.96 (0.791.14)0.60
Model 2MS‐DRG and LOS in quartiles1.38 (0.981.94)0.071.05 (0.881.26)0.59
Model 3MS‐DRG dropped, LOS continuous1.14 (0.771.70)0.510.95 (0.791.14)0.56

DISCUSSION

We found that hospitalist physician continuity was not associated with the incidence of AEs. Our findings are somewhat surprising because of the high value placed on continuity of care and patient safety concerns related to handoffs. Key clinical information may be lost when patient care is transitioned to a new hospitalist shortly after admission (eg, from a night hospitalist) or at the end of a rotation. Thus, it is logical to assume that discontinuity inherently increases the risk for harm. On the other hand, a physician newly taking over patient care from another may not be anchored to the initial diagnosis and treatment plan established by the first. This second look could potentially prevent missed/delayed diagnoses and optimize the plan of care.[19] These countervailing forces may explain our findings.

Several other potential explanations for our findings should be considered. First, the quality of handoffs may have been sufficient to overcome the potential for information loss. We feel this is unlikely given that little attention had been dedicated to improving the quality of patient handoffs among hospitalists in our institution. Notably, though a number of studies have evaluated resident physician handoffs, most of the work has focused on night coverage, and little is known about the quality of attending handoffs.[20] Second, access to a fully integrated electronic health record may have assisted hospitalists in complementing information received during handoffs. For example, a hospitalist about to start his or her rotation may have remotely accessed and reviewed patient medical records prior to receiving the phone handoff from the outgoing hospitalist. Third, other efforts to improve patient safety may have reduced the overall risk and provided some resilience in the system. Unit‐based interventions, including structured interdisciplinary rounds and nurse‐physician coleadership, improved teamwork climate and reduced AEs in the study hospital over time.[7]

Another factor to consider relates to the fact that hospital care is provided by teams of clinicians (eg, nurses, specialist physicians, therapists, social workers). Hospital teams are often large and have dynamic team membership. Similar to hospitalists, nurses, physician specialists, and other team members handoff care throughout the course of a patient's hospital stay. Yet, discontinuity for each professional type may occur at different times and frequencies. For example, a patient may be handed off from one hospitalist to another, yet the care continues with the same cardiologist or nurse. Future research should better characterize hospital team complexity (eg, size, relationships among members) and dynamics (eg, continuity for various professional types) and the impact of these factors on patient outcomes.

Our findings are important because hospitalist physician discontinuity is common during hospital stays. Hospital medicine groups vary in their staffing and scheduling models. Policies related to admission distribution and rotation length (consecutive days worked) systematically impact physician continuity. Few studies have evaluated the effect on continuity on hospitalized patient outcomes, and no prior research, to our knowledge, has explored the association of continuity on measures of patient safety.[6, 21, 22] Though our study might suggest that staffing models have little impact on patient safety, as previously mentioned, other team factors may influence patient outcomes.

Our study has several limitations. First, we assessed the impact of continuity on AEs in a single site. Although the 7 days on/7 days off model is the most common scheduling pattern used by adult hospital medicine groups,[23] staffing models and patient safety practices vary across hospitals, potentially limiting the generalizability of our study. Second, continuity can be defined and measured in a variety of ways. We used 2 different measures of physician continuity. As previously mentioned, assessing continuity of other clinicians may allow for a more complete understanding of the potential problems related to fragmentation of care. Third, this study excluded patients who experienced care transitions from other hospitals or other units within the hospital. Patients transferred from other hospitals are often complex, severely ill, and may be at higher risk for loss of key clinical information. Fourth, we used automated screens of an EDW to identify potential AEs. Although our prior research found that this method identified a similar number of AEs as manual medical record review screening, there was poor agreement between the 2 methods. Unfortunately, there is no gold standard to identify AEs. The EDW‐facilitated method allowed us to feasibly screen a larger number of charts, increasing statistical power, and minimized any potential bias that might occur during a manual review to identify potential AEs. Finally, we used data available from 2 prior studies and may have been underpowered to detect a significant association between continuity and AEs due to the relatively low percentage of patients experiencing an AE. In a post hoc power calculation, we estimated that we had 70% power to detect a 33% change in the proportion of patients with 1 or more AE for each 1‐unit increase in NPI, and 80% power to detect a 20% change for each 0.1‐unit decrease in UPC.

CONCLUSION

In conclusion, we found that hospitalist physician continuity was not associated with the incidence of AEs. We speculate that hospitalist continuity is only 1 of many team factors that may influence patient safety, and that prior efforts within our institution may have reduced our ability to detect an association. Future research should better characterize hospital team complexity and dynamics and the impact of these factors on patient outcomes.

Disclosures

This project was supported by a grant from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and an Excellence in Academic Medicine Award, administered by Northwestern Memorial Hospital. The authors report no conflicts of interest.

References
  1. Gulliford M, Naithani S, Morgan M. What is “continuity of care”? J Health Serv Res Policy. 2006;11:248250.
  2. Saultz JW, Lochner J. Interpersonal continuity of care and care outcomes: a critical review. Ann Fam Med. 2005;3:159166.
  3. Walraven C, Oake N, Jennings A, Forster AJ. The association between continuity of care and outcomes: a systematic and critical review. J Eval Clin Pract. 2010;16:947956.
  4. Saultz JW, Albedaiwi W. Interpersonal continuity of care and patient satisfaction: a critical review. Ann Fam Med. 2004;2:445451.
  5. Blankfield RP, Kelly RB, Alemagno SA, King CM. Continuity of care in a family practice residency program. Impact on physician satisfaction. J Fam Pract. 1990;31:6973.
  6. Turner J, Hansen L, Hinami K, et al. The impact of hospitalist discontinuity on hospital cost, readmissions, and patient satisfaction. J Gen Intern Med. 2014;29:10041008.
  7. O'Leary KJ, Creden AJ, Slade ME, et al. Implementation of unit‐based interventions to improve teamwork and patient safety on a medical service [published online ahead of print June 11, 2014]. Am J Med Qual. doi: 10.1177/1062860614538093.
  8. Steinwachs DM. Measuring provider continuity in ambulatory care: an assessment of alternative approaches. Med Care. 1979;17:551565.
  9. Saultz JW. Defining and measuring interpersonal continuity of care. Ann Fam Med. 2003;1:134143.
  10. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Adverse events in hospitals: national incidence among medical beneficiaries. Available at: http://psnet.ahrq.gov/resource.aspx?resourceID=19811. Published November 2010. Accessed on December 15, 2014.
  11. Classen DC, Resar R, Griffin F, et al. “Global trigger tool” shows that adverse events in hospitals may be ten times greater than previously measured. Health Aff (Millwood). 2011;30:581589.
  12. Hiatt HH, Barnes BA, Brennan TA, et al. A study of medical injury and medical malpractice. N Engl J Med. 1989;321:480484.
  13. Thomas EJ, Studdert DM, Burstin HR, et al. Incidence and types of adverse events and negligent care in Utah and Colorado. Med Care. 2000;38:261271.
  14. O'Leary KJ, Devisetty VK, Patel AR, et al. Comparison of traditional trigger tool to data warehouse based screening for identifying hospital adverse events. BMJ Qual Saf. 2013;22:130138.
  15. Brennan TA, Leape LL, Laird NM, et al. Incidence of adverse events and negligence in hospitalized patients. Results of the Harvard Medical Practice Study I. N Engl J Med. 1991;324:370376.
  16. Stelfox HT, Bates DW, Redelmeier DA. Safety of patients isolated for infection control. JAMA. 2003;290:18991905.
  17. HCUP Clinical Classification Software. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/toolssoftware/ccs/ccs.jsp. Accessed on December 15, 2014.
  18. Elixhauser A, Steiner C, Harris DR, Coffey RM. Comorbidity measures for use with administrative data. Med Care. 1998;36:827.
  19. Wachter RM. Does continuity of care matter? No: discontinuity can improve patient care. West J Med. 2001;175:5.
  20. Arora VM, Manjarrez E, Dressler DD, Basaviah P, Halasyamani L, Kripalani S. Hospitalist handoffs: a systematic review and task force recommendations. J Hosp Med. 2009;4:433440.
  21. Epstein K, Juarez E, Epstein A, Loya K, Singer A. The impact of fragmentation of hospitalist care on length of stay. J Hosp Med. 2010;5:335338.
  22. Chandra S, Wright SM, Howell EE. The Creating Incentives and Continuity Leading to Efficiency staffing model: a quality improvement initiative in hospital medicine. Mayo Clin Proc. 2012;87:364371.
  23. Society of Hospital Medicine. 2014 state of hospital medicine report. Philadelphia, PA: Society of Hospital Medicine; 2014.
References
  1. Gulliford M, Naithani S, Morgan M. What is “continuity of care”? J Health Serv Res Policy. 2006;11:248250.
  2. Saultz JW, Lochner J. Interpersonal continuity of care and care outcomes: a critical review. Ann Fam Med. 2005;3:159166.
  3. Walraven C, Oake N, Jennings A, Forster AJ. The association between continuity of care and outcomes: a systematic and critical review. J Eval Clin Pract. 2010;16:947956.
  4. Saultz JW, Albedaiwi W. Interpersonal continuity of care and patient satisfaction: a critical review. Ann Fam Med. 2004;2:445451.
  5. Blankfield RP, Kelly RB, Alemagno SA, King CM. Continuity of care in a family practice residency program. Impact on physician satisfaction. J Fam Pract. 1990;31:6973.
  6. Turner J, Hansen L, Hinami K, et al. The impact of hospitalist discontinuity on hospital cost, readmissions, and patient satisfaction. J Gen Intern Med. 2014;29:10041008.
  7. O'Leary KJ, Creden AJ, Slade ME, et al. Implementation of unit‐based interventions to improve teamwork and patient safety on a medical service [published online ahead of print June 11, 2014]. Am J Med Qual. doi: 10.1177/1062860614538093.
  8. Steinwachs DM. Measuring provider continuity in ambulatory care: an assessment of alternative approaches. Med Care. 1979;17:551565.
  9. Saultz JW. Defining and measuring interpersonal continuity of care. Ann Fam Med. 2003;1:134143.
  10. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Adverse events in hospitals: national incidence among medical beneficiaries. Available at: http://psnet.ahrq.gov/resource.aspx?resourceID=19811. Published November 2010. Accessed on December 15, 2014.
  11. Classen DC, Resar R, Griffin F, et al. “Global trigger tool” shows that adverse events in hospitals may be ten times greater than previously measured. Health Aff (Millwood). 2011;30:581589.
  12. Hiatt HH, Barnes BA, Brennan TA, et al. A study of medical injury and medical malpractice. N Engl J Med. 1989;321:480484.
  13. Thomas EJ, Studdert DM, Burstin HR, et al. Incidence and types of adverse events and negligent care in Utah and Colorado. Med Care. 2000;38:261271.
  14. O'Leary KJ, Devisetty VK, Patel AR, et al. Comparison of traditional trigger tool to data warehouse based screening for identifying hospital adverse events. BMJ Qual Saf. 2013;22:130138.
  15. Brennan TA, Leape LL, Laird NM, et al. Incidence of adverse events and negligence in hospitalized patients. Results of the Harvard Medical Practice Study I. N Engl J Med. 1991;324:370376.
  16. Stelfox HT, Bates DW, Redelmeier DA. Safety of patients isolated for infection control. JAMA. 2003;290:18991905.
  17. HCUP Clinical Classification Software. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/toolssoftware/ccs/ccs.jsp. Accessed on December 15, 2014.
  18. Elixhauser A, Steiner C, Harris DR, Coffey RM. Comorbidity measures for use with administrative data. Med Care. 1998;36:827.
  19. Wachter RM. Does continuity of care matter? No: discontinuity can improve patient care. West J Med. 2001;175:5.
  20. Arora VM, Manjarrez E, Dressler DD, Basaviah P, Halasyamani L, Kripalani S. Hospitalist handoffs: a systematic review and task force recommendations. J Hosp Med. 2009;4:433440.
  21. Epstein K, Juarez E, Epstein A, Loya K, Singer A. The impact of fragmentation of hospitalist care on length of stay. J Hosp Med. 2010;5:335338.
  22. Chandra S, Wright SM, Howell EE. The Creating Incentives and Continuity Leading to Efficiency staffing model: a quality improvement initiative in hospital medicine. Mayo Clin Proc. 2012;87:364371.
  23. Society of Hospital Medicine. 2014 state of hospital medicine report. Philadelphia, PA: Society of Hospital Medicine; 2014.
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Journal of Hospital Medicine - 10(3)
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Journal of Hospital Medicine - 10(3)
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Address for correspondence and reprint requests: Kevin J. O'Leary, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine, Division of Hospital Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60611; Telephone: 312‐926‐5924; Fax: 312‐926‐4588; E‐mail: [email protected]
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