Author:
Hill Keith D,Vu Michelle,Walsh Willeke
Abstract
Objective: To determine the resource utilisation of
patients who fall within an acute metropolitan hospital.
Design: Retrospective observational study, part
of a larger falls prevention project in a 323-bed
acute care, tertiary teaching hospital in Melbourne,
Australia. A review of falls incidents was undertaken
for all patient admissions for 18 months from
January 2002, excluding the Day Procedure Unit,
Intensive Care Unit, Coronary Care Unit and the
Emergency Department.
Procedure: The most common diagnosis related
groups (DRGs) associated with fallers were identified,
and within each DRG, fallers were matched to
non-fallers by age and gender. Difference in hospital
length of stay (LOS) and disparity in resource
consumption by these two groups were calculated.
Results: The DRG with the highest proportion of
fallers was 'Dementia and other chronic disturbances
of cerebral function' (24%). Three of the
top six DRGs had significantly longer LOS for
fallers compared with non-fallers ('Delirium',
'Stroke' and 'Respiratory conditions') (P<0.05).
Hospital-related costs were significantly higher for
fallers compared with non-fallers for the DRG
'Stroke with severe/complicating diagnosis/procedure'
only (P< 0.05).
Conclusions: Inpatient LOS and total associated
costs for patients who fell and were classified
among the DRGs with the highest proportion of
fallers were substantially higher than those of
matched non-fallers. Effective falls prevention
activities targeting these high-risk groups should
be a priority, in the context of broader falls prevention activities within a hospital setting.
Cited by
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