A controlled intervention in reduction of redundant hospital days

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Abstract

Background. Inappropriate use of hospital services, in the form of unjustified hospital stay days (HSD), constitutes a major burden on a health budget. Reduction of unjustified HSD was achieved in a medical ward in a previous intervention study. Methods. A controlled intervention aimed at reducing unjustified hospital stay was performed on 155 paediatric inpatients and 248 controls, by applying pre-set criteria for hospitalization and comparing to results in previous studies. Results. Unjustified stay was decreased from 32.6% to 14.8% on the study ward, and from 25.7% to 19.3% on the control ward. The children on both wards did not differ significantly in rates of subsequent out of hospital mortality, re-admission, and the subjective evaluation of health by their parents one month following discharge. Conclusions. This study demonstrates that despite the fact that the per cent of unjustified HSD on a paediatric ward is much lower than on medicine or surgery, a significant reduction in unjustified stay can be achieved by intervention programme.

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Vardi, A., Modan, B., Blumstein, Z., Lusky, A., Schiff, E., & Barzilay, Z. (1996). A controlled intervention in reduction of redundant hospital days. International Journal of Epidemiology, 25(3), 604–608. https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/25.3.604

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