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- Benjamin Wertheimer, Ramon E A Jacobs, Eduardo Iturrate, Martha Bailey, and Katherine Hochman.
- Department of Medicine, New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, New York.
- J Hosp Med. 2015 Oct 1; 10 (10): 664-9.
BackgroundLate afternoon hospital discharges are thought to contribute to admission bottlenecks. We previously described an intervention that resulted in a statistically significant increase in the discharge before noon (DBN) rate on 2 inpatient medicine units.ObjectiveTo evaluate (1) the effect of an increased DBN rate on the admission arrival time and the number of admissions per hour and (2) the sustainability of our DBN initiative.DesignPre-/postintervention retrospective analysis.SettingTwo acute-care inpatient medicine units in a tertiary care, urban, academic medical center.PatientsFor the admission arrival time and admissions per hour analysis, all inpatients admitted to the medical units from June 1, 2011 to June 31, 2013. For the sustainability analysis, all patients discharged from July 1, 2013 to December 31, 2014.InterventionA multidisciplinary intervention to increase the DBN rate.MeasurementsDate and time of arrival to all inpatient sites, and discharge date and time of all patients from 2 inpatient medicine units.ResultsConcurrent with our increase in DBN rate, we found a statistically significant change in the median arrival time of emergency department (ED) admissions and transfers from 5 pm to 4 pm. High-frequency admission peaks were statistically significantly reduced for ED admissions. The statistically significant increase in DBN rate is sustained at 35%.ConclusionsIncreasing the DBN rate correlates with admissions arriving earlier in the day and reductions in high-frequency peaks of ED admissions. Statistically significant improvements in DBN rates are sustainable.© 2015 Society of Hospital Medicine.
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