• Sleep · Feb 2013

    Association between adaptations to ACGME duty hour requirements, length of stay, and costs.

    • Glenn Rosenbluth, Darren M Fiore, Judith H Maselli, Eric Vittinghoff, Stephen D Wilson, and Andrew D Auerbach.
    • Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine, University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, San Francisco, CA 94143-0110, USA. rosenbluthg@peds.ucsf.edu
    • Sleep. 2013 Feb 1;36(2):245-8.

    Study ObjectiveTo determine whether adaptations to comply with Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) duty hour requirements are associated with changes in total cost and length of stay.DesignRetrospective, interrupted time-series cohort study using concurrent control patients.SettingUCSF Benioff Children's Hospital, San Francisco, CA.PatientsInpatients newborn to 18 y on the primary pediatrics medical-surgical unit. Medical patients were studied before and after an intervention, and surgical patients served as a concurrent control group.InterventionPediatrics trainees' work schedules were changed from those that relied on prolonged call shifts to those primarily based on shorter day shifts and night shifts.ResultsWe detected significant relative reductions in length of stay but not in total cost. When the analysis was limited to the subset of patients who did not receive intensive care unit care, length of stay decreased by 18% and total cost decreased by 10%. We did not detect similar changes in the control group.ConclusionsA trainee staffing model that included shorter shifts as consistent with current ACGME duty hour requirements was associated with reduced length of stay and total costs for patients not in the intensive care unit.

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