| Literature DB >> 33126854 |
Sofi Varg1,2, Veronica Vicente3,4,5, Maaret Castren5,6, Peter Lindgren7,8, Clas Rehnberg7,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A decision system in the ambulance allowing alternative pathways to alternate healthcare providers has been developed for older patients in Stockholm, Sweden. However, subsequent healthcare resource use resulting from these pathways has not yet been addressed. The aim of this study was therefore to describe patient pathways, healthcare utilisation and costs following ambulance transportation to alternative healthcare providers.Entities:
Keywords: Aged; Critical pathways; Decision support systems, clinical; Delivery of health care; Emergency medical services; Health care costs
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33126854 PMCID: PMC7602326 DOI: 10.1186/s12873-020-00380-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Fig. 1Scheme of inclusion of study population
Case-mix of the study population (n = 98)
| % (n) | Mean (±std | Median | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 83 (±8) | 83 (65–104) | ||
| Women | 59 (58) | ||
| Men | 41 (40) | ||
| 1.5 (±1.6) | |||
| Index groups | |||
| 0 | 31 (30) | ||
| 1–2 | 54 (53) | ||
| 3+ | 15 (15) | ||
| Admissions to hospital | 36 (35) | 1 (±1) | 0 (0–1) |
| Hospital days | 6 (±13) | 0 (0–6) | |
| Outpatient visits | 97 (95) | 34 (±54) | 15 (6–31) |
astd = standard deviation
bIQR = Interquartile range: 25th to 75th percentile
Fig. 2Routes of transition for the first continuous inpatient spell. The figure illustrates patient pathways over 10 days. All inter- and intra-hospital transfers in the first continuous inpatient spell, starting with ambulance transportation to each receiving provider respectively, are included. Percentages represent percent of total sample
Resource utilisation over 10 days subsequent to index event for surviving cases
| Mean (std | Median (IQR | Min-Max | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Admissions to hospital | 1 (±1) | 1 (1–1) | 0–4 |
| Hospital days | 6 (±4) | 6 (3–10) | 0–10 |
| Outpatient visits | 3 (±3) | 2 (1–3) | 0–19 |
| Cost (€) | 4382 (±2732) | 3962 (2502–5809) | 343–12,674 |
| | |||
| Admissions to hospital | 1 (±1) | 1 (0–1) | 0–2 |
| Hospital days | 4 (±4) | 4 (0–10) | 0–10 |
| Outpatient visits | 4 (±6) | 1 (1–5) | 1–19 |
| Cost (€) | 5248 (±2676) | 5137 (3345–8171) | 515–8812 |
| | |||
| Admissions to hospital | 1 (±0) | 1 (1–1) | 1–3 |
| Hospital days | 7 (±3) | 8 (5–10) | 1–10 |
| Outpatient visits | 2 (±2) | 1 (0–2) | 0–9 |
| Cost (€) | 4366 (±1680) | 4440 (3205–5087) | 1709–9091 |
| | |||
| Admissions to hospital | 1 (±1) | 1 (0–1) | 0–4 |
| Hospital days | 5 (±4) | 5 (0–10) | 0–10 |
| Outpatient visits | 3 (±2) | 2 (1–4) | 0–10 |
| Cost (€) | 4180 (±3443) | 3726 (795–6230) | 343–12,674 |
astd = standard deviation
bIQR = Interquartile range: 25th to 75th percentile