1. Impact of localizing general medical teams to a single nursing unit.
- Author
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Singh S, Tarima S, Rana V, Marks DS, Conti M, Idstein K, Biblo LA, and Fletcher KE
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Confidence Intervals, Efficiency, Organizational, Female, Geography, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Length of Stay, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Patient Care, Statistics, Nonparametric, Wisconsin, Workflow, Academic Medical Centers organization & administration, Inpatients, Medical Staff, Hospital organization & administration, Models, Organizational, Nursing Service, Hospital organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: Localization of general medical inpatient teams is an attractive way to improve inpatient care but has not been adequately studied., Objective: To evaluate the impact of localizing general medical teams to a single nursing unit., Design: Quasi-experimental study using historical and concurrent controls., Setting: A 490-bed academic medical center in the midwestern United States., Patients: Adult, general medical patients, other than those with sickle cell disease, admitted to medical teams staffed by a hospitalist and a physician assistant (PA)., Intervention: Localization of patients assigned to 2 teams to a single nursing unit., Measurements: Length of stay (LOS), 30-day risk of readmission, charges, pages to teams, encounters, relative value units (RVUs), and steps walked by PAs., Results: Localized teams had 0.89 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.37-1.41) more patient encounters and generated 2.20 more RVUs per day (CI, 1.10-3.29) compared to historical controls; and 1.02 (CI, 0.46-1.58) more patient encounters and generated 1.36 more RVUs per day (CI, 0.17-2.55) compared to concurrent controls. Localized teams received 51% (CI, 48-54) fewer pages during the workday. LOS may have been approximately 10% higher for localized teams. Risk of readmission within 30 days and charges incurred were no different. PAs possibly walked fewer steps while localized., Conclusion: Localization of medical teams led to higher productivity and better workflow, but did not significantly impact readmissions or charges. It may have had an unintended negative impact on hospital efficiency; this finding deserves further study., (Copyright © 2012 Society of Hospital Medicine.)
- Published
- 2012
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