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- Victoria J St Noble, Gary Davies, and Derek Bell.
- Department of Medicine, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London.
- QJM. 2008 Jul 1;101(7):529-33.
BackgroundThe importance of acute medical units and their associated medical cover is stressed in current practice but there is a paucity of existing research to establish their impact on acute patient care.AimTo assess the impact of a new medical admission process and associated medical cover on patient length of stay (LOS), direct discharge rates (DDR) (for admissions <24 and 48 h), daily discharge and readmission rates (RR).DesignWe performed a retrospective analysis of 3163 medical patients admitted before and after a ward was reconfigured to function as an acute medical unit (AMU), with a new on-call rota: 'consultant of the day' changing to 'consultant of the weekend', with aligned junior medical cover.MethodsAll medical admissions were analysed over three 2-month periods: two periods prior to the new AMU process (October to November, 2005 and June to July, 2006), and one period after the changes (October to Nov, 2006) which were made in August 2006.ResultsAverage LOS was reduced from 8.6 and 9.3 for the two previous periods (June to July, 2006 and October to November, 2005) to 7.8 days for October to November, 2006, (P = 0.028). DDR for patients with a LOS under 24 and 48 h increased from 21.3% and 31.2% to 28.5% and 39.5%, respectively for both 24 h (P < 0.005) and 48 h LOS (P = 0.038). No significant difference in RR were observed (within 7 days) over the same periods. For admissions <48 h, the percentage of patients discharged increased for the Consultant-led teams (P < 0.006) before and after the new process. A statistically insignificant trend in relation to DDR was observed towards increased discharges over the weekend.DiscussionThe change in AMU process has resulted in improved DDR and patient length of stay, with no adverse effects on RR.
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