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Effects of a medical admission unit on in-hospital patient flow and clinical outcomes.
Canetta, Ciro; Accordino, Silvia; La Boria, Elisa; Arosio, Gianpiero; Cacco, Silvia; Formagnana, Pietro; Masotti, Michela; Provini, Stella; Passera, Sonia; Viganò, Giovanni; Sozzi, Fabiola.
Affiliation
  • Canetta C; High Care Internal Medicine Unit, Foundation IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico of Milan, Italy.
  • Accordino S; High Care Internal Medicine Unit, Foundation IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico of Milan, Italy. Electronic address: silvia.accordino@policlinico.mi.it.
  • La Boria E; Internal Medicine and Medical Admission Unit, Ospedale Maggiore of Crema, ASST Crema, Italy.
  • Arosio G; Internal Medicine and Medical Admission Unit, Ospedale Maggiore of Crema, ASST Crema, Italy.
  • Cacco S; Post Acute Medicine Unit, Foundation IRCCS Istituti Clinici Scientifici Salvatore Maugeri of Milan, Italy.
  • Formagnana P; Internal Medicine and Medical Admission Unit, Ospedale Maggiore of Crema, ASST Crema, Italy.
  • Masotti M; Internal Medicine and Medical Admission Unit, Ospedale Maggiore of Crema, ASST Crema, Italy.
  • Provini S; Internal Medicine Unit, Ospedale Civico of Codogno, ASST Lodi, Italy.
  • Passera S; Internal Medicine and Medical Admission Unit, Ospedale Maggiore of Crema, ASST Crema, Italy.
  • Viganò G; Internal Medicine and Medical Admission Unit, Ospedale Maggiore of Crema, ASST Crema, Italy.
  • Sozzi F; Cardiology Unit, Foundation IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico of Milan, Italy.
Eur J Intern Med ; 2024 May 11.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38735801
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

the burden of acute complex patients, increasingly older and poli-pathological, accessing to Emergency Departments (ED) leads up hospital overcrowding and the outlying phenomenon. These issues highlight the need for new adequate patients' management strategies. The aim of this study is to analyse the effects on in-hospital patient flow and clinical outcomes of a high-technology and time-limited Medical Admission Unit (MAU) run by internists.

METHODS:

all consecutive patients admitted to MAU from Dec-2017 to Nov-2019 were included in the study. The admissions number from ED and hospitalization rate, the overall in-hospital mortality rate in medical department, the total days of hospitalization and the overall outliers bed days were compared to those from the previous two years.

RESULTS:

2162 patients were admitted in MAU, 2085(95.6%) from ED, 476(22.0%) were directly discharged, 88(4.1%) died and 1598(73.9%) were transferred to other wards, with a median in-MAU time of stay of 64.5 [0.2-344.2] hours. Comparing the 24 months before, despite the increase in admissions/year from ED in medical department (3842 ± 106 in Dec2015-Nov2017 vs 4062 ± 100 in Dec2017-Nov2019, p<0.001), the number of the outlier bed days has been reduced, especially in surgical department (11.46 ± 6.25% in Dec2015-Nov2017 vs 6.39 ± 3.08% in Dec2017-Nov2019, p=0.001), and mortality in medical area has dropped from 8.74 ± 0.37% to 7.29 ± 0.57%, p<0.001.

CONCLUSIONS:

over two years, a patient-centred and problem-oriented approach in a medical admission buffer unit run by internists has ensured a constant flow of acute patients with positive effects on clinical risk and quality of care reducing medical outliers and in-hospital mortality.
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Eur J Intern Med Journal subject: MEDICINA INTERNA Year: 2024 Type: Article Affiliation country: Italy

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Eur J Intern Med Journal subject: MEDICINA INTERNA Year: 2024 Type: Article Affiliation country: Italy