279. Does Sitting In a Chair Improve Patient Stay in the Hospital? Questioning Medicine
-
- Medicina
Chair placement was not associated with a difference in patients’ ability to name their physician (P=1.0), ability to successfully identify their reason for hospital admission (P=0.82), or perceptions of time (P=0.2) (see supplemental table 5). Overall if you put a chair at bedside and have medstudents following then yes a provider is more likely to sit down. However- this only minimally changes patient satisfaction score 3.9% on a 100 point scale. This would take hospital change. And set up change. This although touted as positive is a negative trial for those in HR and adminhttps://www.bmj.com/content/383/bmj-2023-076309
Chair placement was not associated with a difference in patients’ ability to name their physician (P=1.0), ability to successfully identify their reason for hospital admission (P=0.82), or perceptions of time (P=0.2) (see supplemental table 5). Overall if you put a chair at bedside and have medstudents following then yes a provider is more likely to sit down. However- this only minimally changes patient satisfaction score 3.9% on a 100 point scale. This would take hospital change. And set up change. This although touted as positive is a negative trial for those in HR and adminhttps://www.bmj.com/content/383/bmj-2023-076309
7 min