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Clinical question: Does an increased hospitalist workload lead to increased costs, longer lengths of stay, and worse medical outcomes?
Background: There is evidence that increased resident physician workloads contribute to adverse medical outcomes, but this has not been assessed in the hospital medicine setting. In a recent national survey of hospitalists, almost half reported that they had managed workloads that felt “unsafe.”
Study design: Retrospective cohort study.
Setting: Academic community health system in Delaware.
Synopsis: This study examined the effect of hospital occupancy and hospitalist workloads, using both daily relative value units (RVUs) and hospitalists’ daily patient census, on length of stay (LOS), hospital costs, inpatient mortality, activation of rapid response system (a proxy measure for decompensation), and 30-day readmission rates. Authors reviewed 20,241 hospitalizations and found that when hospitalist daily censuses exceeded 15 patients (or RVU of 25), length of stay increased “exponentially.” Increased workloads were not associated with worsening medical outcomes or diminished patient satisfaction scores.
The authors caution that the significantly increased costs and LOS at higher patient censuses raise concerns that hospital policies that incentivize productivity may “undermine larger system efforts targeting efficiency and costs of care.” They also suggest that hospitalist groups’ staffing approaches need to accommodate fluctuations in hospital occupancy.
Bottom line: When a hospitalist’s workload exceeds a census of 15 patients, the length of stay and cost may increase dramatically.
Article Reference: Elliott DJ, Young RS, Brice J, Aguiar R, Kolm P. Effect of hospitalist workload on the quality and efficiency of care. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(5):786-793.
Clinical question: Does an increased hospitalist workload lead to increased costs, longer lengths of stay, and worse medical outcomes?
Background: There is evidence that increased resident physician workloads contribute to adverse medical outcomes, but this has not been assessed in the hospital medicine setting. In a recent national survey of hospitalists, almost half reported that they had managed workloads that felt “unsafe.”
Study design: Retrospective cohort study.
Setting: Academic community health system in Delaware.
Synopsis: This study examined the effect of hospital occupancy and hospitalist workloads, using both daily relative value units (RVUs) and hospitalists’ daily patient census, on length of stay (LOS), hospital costs, inpatient mortality, activation of rapid response system (a proxy measure for decompensation), and 30-day readmission rates. Authors reviewed 20,241 hospitalizations and found that when hospitalist daily censuses exceeded 15 patients (or RVU of 25), length of stay increased “exponentially.” Increased workloads were not associated with worsening medical outcomes or diminished patient satisfaction scores.
The authors caution that the significantly increased costs and LOS at higher patient censuses raise concerns that hospital policies that incentivize productivity may “undermine larger system efforts targeting efficiency and costs of care.” They also suggest that hospitalist groups’ staffing approaches need to accommodate fluctuations in hospital occupancy.
Bottom line: When a hospitalist’s workload exceeds a census of 15 patients, the length of stay and cost may increase dramatically.
Article Reference: Elliott DJ, Young RS, Brice J, Aguiar R, Kolm P. Effect of hospitalist workload on the quality and efficiency of care. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(5):786-793.
Clinical question: Does an increased hospitalist workload lead to increased costs, longer lengths of stay, and worse medical outcomes?
Background: There is evidence that increased resident physician workloads contribute to adverse medical outcomes, but this has not been assessed in the hospital medicine setting. In a recent national survey of hospitalists, almost half reported that they had managed workloads that felt “unsafe.”
Study design: Retrospective cohort study.
Setting: Academic community health system in Delaware.
Synopsis: This study examined the effect of hospital occupancy and hospitalist workloads, using both daily relative value units (RVUs) and hospitalists’ daily patient census, on length of stay (LOS), hospital costs, inpatient mortality, activation of rapid response system (a proxy measure for decompensation), and 30-day readmission rates. Authors reviewed 20,241 hospitalizations and found that when hospitalist daily censuses exceeded 15 patients (or RVU of 25), length of stay increased “exponentially.” Increased workloads were not associated with worsening medical outcomes or diminished patient satisfaction scores.
The authors caution that the significantly increased costs and LOS at higher patient censuses raise concerns that hospital policies that incentivize productivity may “undermine larger system efforts targeting efficiency and costs of care.” They also suggest that hospitalist groups’ staffing approaches need to accommodate fluctuations in hospital occupancy.
Bottom line: When a hospitalist’s workload exceeds a census of 15 patients, the length of stay and cost may increase dramatically.
Article Reference: Elliott DJ, Young RS, Brice J, Aguiar R, Kolm P. Effect of hospitalist workload on the quality and efficiency of care. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(5):786-793.