Variability in Surgical Caseload and Access to Intensive Care Services

Author:

McManus Michael L.1,Long Michael C.2,Cooper Abbot3,Mandell James4,Berwick Donald M.5,Pagano Marcello6,Litvak Eugene7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anesthesia and the Multidisciplinary Intensive Care Unit, Children's Hospital Boston; Associate Professor, Harvard Medical School.

2. Senior Anesthetist, the Massachusetts General Hospital; Assistant Professor, Harvard Medical School; Adjunct Associate Professor of Management, Boston University.

3. Senior Analyst, Program on Variability.

4. President, Children's Hospital Boston; Professor, Harvard Medical School.

5. CEO, Institute for Healthcare Improvement.

6. Professor of Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.

7. Professor of Health Care and Operations Management, Boston University School of Management.

Abstract

Background Variability in the demand for any service is a significant barrier to efficient distribution of limited resources. In health care, demand is often highly variable and access may be limited when peaks cannot be accommodated in a downsized care delivery system. Intensive care units may frequently present bottlenecks to patient flow, and saturation of these services limits a hospital's responsiveness to new emergencies. Methods Over a 1-yr period, information was collected prospectively on all requests for admission to the intensive care unit of a large, urban children's hospital. Data included the nature of each request, as well as each patient's final disposition. The daily variability of requests was then analyzed and related to the unit's ability to accommodate new admissions. Results Day-to-day demand for intensive care services was extremely variable. This variability was particularly high among patients undergoing scheduled surgical procedures, with variability of scheduled admissions exceeding that of emergencies. Peaks of demand were associated with diversion of patients both within the hospital (to off-service care sites) and to other institutions (ambulance diversions). Although emergency requests for admission outnumbered scheduled requests, diversion from the intensive care unit was better correlated with scheduled caseload (r = 0.542, P < 0.001) than with unscheduled volume (r = 0.255, P < 0.001). During the busiest periods, nearly 70% of all diversions were associated with variability in the scheduled caseload. Conclusions Variability in scheduled surgical caseload represents a potentially reducible source of stress on intensive care units in hospitals and throughout the healthcare delivery system generally. When uncontrolled, variability limits access to care and impairs overall responsiveness to emergencies.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference34 articles.

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