Marianne E Weiss 1 , Olga Yakusheva , Kathleen L Bobay . Show Affiliations »
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To determine the impact of unit-level nurse staffing on quality of discharge teaching, patient perception of discharge readiness, and postdischarge readmission and emergency department (ED) visits, and cost-benefit of adjustments to unit nurse staffing. DATA SOURCES: Patient questionnaires, electronic medical records, and administrative data for 1,892 medical-surgical patients from 16 nursing units within four acute care hospitals between January and July 2008. DESIGN: Nested panel data with hospital and unit-level fixed effects and patient and unit-level control variables. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION: Registered nurse (RN) staffing was recorded monthly in hours-per-patient-day. Patient questionnaires were completed before discharge. Thirty-day readmission and ED use with reimbursement data were obtained by cross-hospital electronic searches. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Higher RN nonovertime staffing decreased odds of readmission (OR=0.56); higher RN overtime staffing increased odds of ED visit (OR=1.70). RN nonovertime staffing reduced ED visits indirectly, via a sequential path through discharge teaching quality and discharge readiness. Cost analysis projected total savings from 1 SD increase in RN nonovertime staffing and decrease in RN overtime of U.S.$11.64 million and U.S.$544,000 annually for the 16 study units. CONCLUSIONS: Postdischarge utilization costs could potentially be reduced by investment in nursing care hours to better prepare patients before hospital discharge. © Health Research and Educational Trust.
OBJECTIVES: To determine the impact of unit-level nurse staffing on quality of discharge teaching, patient perception of discharge readiness, and postdischarge readmission and emergency department (ED) visits, and cost-benefit of adjustments to unit nurse staffing. DATA SOURCES: Patient questionnaires, electronic medical records, and administrative data for 1,892 medical-surgical patients from 16 nursing units within four acute care hospitals between January and July 2008. DESIGN: Nested panel data with hospital and unit-level fixed effects and patient and unit-level control variables. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION: Registered nurse (RN) staffing was recorded monthly in hours-per-patient -day. Patient questionnaires were completed before discharge. Thirty-day readmission and ED use with reimbursement data were obtained by cross-hospital electronic searches. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Higher RN nonovertime staffing decreased odds of readmission (OR=0.56); higher RN overtime staffing increased odds of ED visit (OR=1.70). RN nonovertime staffing reduced ED visits indirectly, via a sequential path through discharge teaching quality and discharge readiness. Cost analysis projected total savings from 1 SD increase in RN nonovertime staffing and decrease in RN overtime of U.S.$11.64 million and U.S.$544,000 annually for the 16 study units. CONCLUSIONS: Postdischarge utilization costs could potentially be reduced by investment in nursing care hours to better prepare patients before hospital discharge. © Health Research and Educational Trust.
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Year: 2011
PMID: 21517836 PMCID: PMC3207188 DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2011.01267.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Serv Res ISSN: 0017-9124 Impact factor: 3.402