Literature DB >> 9007604

Appropriateness of admission and the last 24 hours of hospital care in medical wards in an east London teaching group hospital.

A Houghton1, A Bowling, I Jones, K Clarke.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the rates of inappropriateness of admission and last day of care on adult medical wards in an east London hospital, to identify associations with any inappropriateness and to assess what services need to be improved or provided if patients assessed as "inappropriate" are to be more appropriately placed in the future.
DESIGN: From the patients' medical notes, nursing notes and ward charts, a trained reviewer with nursing and university qualifications collected concurrent information about each patient's first 24 hours as an in-patient and about the last 24 hours of care preceding discharge. Patients were also interviewed before discharge and 7-10 days after discharge, and their health status and level of satisfaction about the discharge process assessed.
SETTING: The three adult medical wards at the Homerton Hospital in Hackney, east London. This hospital is within the St Bartholomew's Hospital Teaching Hospital Group.
SUBJECTS: The case-notes of a random sample of 625 adult in-patients were reviewed. END POINTS: Appropriateness of admission and last day of care. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The main instrument used was the Appropriateness Evaluation Protocol (AEP). This is an instrument devised to assess the appropriateness of adult patient admission to, and specific days of care in, acute hospital beds through case-note review against a structured set of criteria.
RESULTS: The study presented here reported that 31% of in-patient admissions to adult medical wards in an east London hospital were inappropriate, and also that 66% of the last days of stay were inappropriate.
CONCLUSIONS: There is clearly considerable room for improvement in relation to cooperation between service providers in order to maximise efficient bed use. Delays due to waiting for medications from pharmacy, and the combination of more "inappropriate" cases wanting help from social services after discharge with the fact that many of them were still in hospital because they were waiting for these services to be organized, suggest that inappropriateness could be reduced through increased efficiency or increased provision in these areas. The study reported here is unique in its inclusion of patient interview data.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 9007604     DOI: 10.1093/intqhc/8.6.543

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Qual Health Care        ISSN: 1353-4505            Impact factor:   2.038


  10 in total

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  10 in total

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