Contributor: Aaron Lessen MD
Educational Pearls:
-
A study evaluated the patient-care impact and financial costs of holding patients in the ED, a nationwide issue
-
Prospective, observational study of acute stroke management
-
Conducted at a large urban, comprehensive stroke center
-
The study evaluated patients in multiple categories:
-
admitted to med/surg
-
admitted to med/surg but held in the ED
-
admitted to the ICU
-
Admitted to ICU but held in the ED
-
Examined the amount of time nurses and providers spent with each patient
-
This was analyzed in conjunction with the knowledge of each providers’ salaries and the overhead costs of the med/surg unit, ICU, and ED
-
Conclusions:
-
Patients who required med/surg inpatient care but who were held in the ED resulted in a doubled daily cost
-
$1856 for med/surg inpatient boarding vs $993 for med/surg inpatient care
-
Patients who required ICU care but who were held in the ED also resulted in an increased daily cost, but this difference was not as large
-
$2267 for ICU inpatient boarding vs $2165 for ICU care
-
Holding in the ED negatively impacts patients since they receive less time from providers
-
Holding also results in increased financial costs
References
-
Canellas MM, Jewell M, Edwards JL, Olivier D, Jun-O’Connell AH, Reznek MA. Measurement of Cost of Boarding in the Emergency Department Using Time-Driven Activity-Based Costing. Annals of emergency medicine. Published online May 1, 2024. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.annemergmed.2024.04.012
Summarized by Meg Joyce, MS1 | Edited by Meg Joyce & Jorge Chalit, OMS3
Donate: https://emergencymedicalminute.org/donate/
Information
- Show
- FrequencyUpdated weekly
- Published15 November 2024 at 01:39 UTC
- Length2 min
- RatingClean