The benefits of a virtual emergency department observation unit for hospital observation patients

被引:0
作者
Emeli, Iyesatta M. [1 ]
Abiri, Autherine [1 ,2 ]
Hughes, George [1 ]
Moran, Timothy P. [1 ]
Keadey, Matthew T. [1 ]
Ross, Michael A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Emory Univ, Sch Med, Dept Emergency Med, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA
[2] Emory Univ, Neil Hodgson Woodruff Sch Nursing, Atlanta, GA USA
关键词
Telehealth; Virtual care; Telemedicine; Observation medicine; Emergency department observation unit; SENSITIVITY-ANALYSIS; DIAGNOSTIC PROTOCOL; IMPACT; CARE;
D O I
10.1016/j.ajem.2024.07.039
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Background: The benefit of virtual emergency department observation unit (EDOU) care relative to traditional observation care in an inpatient bed is unknown. Objective: To determine if virtual observation care in an EDOU is associated with improved length of stay, cost, inpatient admission rate, and adverse events relative to traditional observation care in non-observation unit (NOU) inpatient bed. Methods: This is a retrospective observational cohort study of observation patients managed over 24 months in two urban teaching hospitals. Following an ED visit, observation care occurred in a virtual-EDOU or NOU inpatient setting based on bed availability, physician discretion, and observation guidelines. Primary outcomes were length of stay, total cost, inpatient admission rate, and adverse events (death or ICU admission). Hospital cost and clinical databases were used. Analysis with a doubly-robust regression with entropy balancing and propensity scores was used to control for subgroup differences. Results: 30,191 observation patients were divided into 13,753 NOU patients and 16,438 EDOU patients with similar distributions for age and gender, and differences in health insurance and diagnosis. For both discharged and admitted patients, the mean cost was higher in the NOU setting at $7989 than the virtual-EDOU setting at $4876 with an adjusted difference of $1951 (95% CI: $1762-$2133). The mean total length of stay was higher in the NOU setting (60.5 h) than the virtual-EDOU setting (36.4 h) with an adjusted difference of 20.4 h (95% CI: 19.2 h - 21.3 h). NOU inpatient admission rates were higher (25.3% vs 18.4%). Cost and length of stays were lower in discharged observation patients, with differences favoring the virtual-EDOU group. Adverse events were higher in the NOU setting (2.1% vs 0.8%). 30-day ED recidivism did not differ significantly between NOU and virtual-EDOU study groups. The virtual-EDOU saved the two hospitals $16,036,913 and 6986 bed-days annually. Conclusion: Management of observation patients in a virtual-EDOU setting is superior to care in a traditional inpatient setting in terms of costs, length of stays, inpatient admission and adverse events rates. (c) 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
引用
收藏
页码:59 / 67
页数:9
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]  
Abbass Ibrahim M, 2015, Manag Care, V24, P46
[2]   The Impact of Virtual Care in an Emergency Department Observation Unit [J].
Abiri, Autherine ;
Keadey, Matthew ;
Hughes, George ;
Pitts, Stephen R. ;
Moran, Tim P. ;
Ross, Michael A. .
ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2023, 81 (02) :222-233
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2022, Emergency department clinical decisions unit reference manual
[4]  
[Anonymous], 2013, OEI-02-12-00040
[5]   Financial Viability of Emergency Department Observation Unit Billing Models [J].
Baugh, Christopher W. ;
Suri, Pawan ;
Caspers, Christopher G. ;
Granovsky, Michael A. ;
Neal, Keith ;
Ross, Michael A. .
ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2019, 26 (01) :31-40
[6]   Making Greater Use Of Dedicated Hospital Observation Units For Many Short-Stay Patients Could Save $3.1 Billion A Year [J].
Baugh, Christopher W. ;
Venkatesh, Arjun K. ;
Hilton, Joshua A. ;
Samuel, Peter A. ;
Schuur, Jeremiah D. ;
Bohan, J. Stephen .
HEALTH AFFAIRS, 2012, 31 (10) :2314-2323
[7]   Returns After Discharge From the Emergency Department Observation Unit: Who, What, When, and Why? [J].
Berger, Daniel ;
King, Steven ;
Caldwell, Catherine ;
Soto, Erik F. ;
Chambers, Andrew ;
Boehmer, Susan ;
Gopaul, Ravindra .
WESTERN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2023, 24 (03) :390-395
[8]   Comparing an on-site nurse practitioner with telemedicine physician support hospitalist programme with a traditional physician hospitalist programme [J].
Boltz, Michelle ;
Cuellar, Norma G. ;
Cole, Casey ;
Pistorese, Brent .
JOURNAL OF TELEMEDICINE AND TELECARE, 2019, 25 (04) :213-220
[9]   Assessing Sensitivity to Unmeasured Confounding Using a Simulated Potential Confounder [J].
Carnegie, Nicole Bohme ;
Harada, Masataka ;
Hill, Jennifer L. .
JOURNAL OF RESEARCH ON EDUCATIONAL EFFECTIVENESS, 2016, 9 (03) :395-420
[10]   Outcomes after observation stays among older adult Medicare beneficiaries in the USA: retrospective cohort study [J].
Dharmarajan, Kumar ;
Qin, Li ;
Bierlein, Maggie ;
Choi, Jennie E. S. ;
Lin, Zhenqiu ;
Desai, Nihar R. ;
Spatz, Erica S. ;
Krumholz, Harlan M. ;
Venkatesh, Arjun K. .
BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2017, 357