A physician-centred intervention to shorten hospital stay: a pilot study

J C Setrakian, K M Flegel, T A Hutchinson, S Charest, L Côté, M D Edwardes, I B Corbett, J C Setrakian, K M Flegel, T A Hutchinson, S Charest, L Côté, M D Edwardes, I B Corbett

Abstract

Background: Studies of length of stay (LOS) in hospital usually focus on physician-independent factors. In this study, the authors identified physician-dependent factors and tested an intervention aimed at them to determine its effect on LOS.

Methods: A prospective comparison of LOS on 2 general medical wards in a tertiary care teaching hospital before and after the intervention. The pre-intervention (control) period and the intervention period were each 4 weeks. The intervention consisted of a checklist for planning management and discharge.

Results: Overall, the mean LOS was shorter during the intervention period than during the control period, but the difference was not statistically significant (12.0 and 14.4 days respectively, p = 0.13). The difference was significant on ward A (11.0 v. 14.7 days respectively, p = 0.02) but not on ward B (13.0 and 14.0 days respectively, p = 0.90).

Interpretation: An intervention at the level of the admitting physician may help to shorten LOS on a general medical ward.

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Source: PubMed

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