The high cost of low-acuity ICU outliers

Direct variable costs were determined on each hospital day for all patients with an intensive care unit (ICU) stay in four Phoenix-area hospital ICUs. Average daily direct variable cost in the four ICUs ranged from $1,436 to $1,759 and represented 69.4 percent and 45.7 percent of total hospital stay...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of healthcare management 2012-11, Vol.57 (6), p.421-433
Hauptverfasser: Dahl, Deborah, Wojtal, Greg G, Breslow, Michael J, Holl, Randy, Huguez, Debra, Stone, David, Korpi, Gloria
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container_end_page 433
container_issue 6
container_start_page 421
container_title Journal of healthcare management
container_volume 57
creator Dahl, Deborah
Wojtal, Greg G
Breslow, Michael J
Holl, Randy
Huguez, Debra
Stone, David
Korpi, Gloria
description Direct variable costs were determined on each hospital day for all patients with an intensive care unit (ICU) stay in four Phoenix-area hospital ICUs. Average daily direct variable cost in the four ICUs ranged from $1,436 to $1,759 and represented 69.4 percent and 45.7 percent of total hospital stay cost for medical and surgical patients, respectively. Daily ICU cost and length of stay (LOS) were higher in patients with higher ICU admission acuity of illness as measured by the APACHE risk prediction methodology; 16.2 percent of patients had an ICU stay in excess of six days, and these LOS outliers accounted for 56.7 percent of total ICU cost. While higher-acuity patients were more likely to be ICU LOS outliers, 11.1 percent of low-risk patients were outliers. The low-risk group included 69.4 percent of the ICU population and accounted for 47 percent of all LOS outliers. Low-risk LOS outliers accounted for 25.3 percent of ICU cost and incurred fivefold higher hospital stay costs and mortality rates. These data suggest that severity of illness is an important determinant of daily resource consumption and LOS, regardless of whether the patient arrives in the ICU with high acuity or develops complications that increase acuity. The finding that a substantial number of long-stay patients come into the ICU with low acuity and deteriorate after ICU admission is not widely recognized and represents an important opportunity to improve patient outcomes and lower costs. ICUs should consider adding low-risk LOS data to their quality and financial performance reports.
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source MEDLINE; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete
subjects Analysis
APACHE
Arizona
Company business management
Costs and Cost Analysis
Economic aspects
Female
Forecasts and trends
Health administration
Health care costs
Humans
Inpatients - statistics & numerical data
Intensive care units
Intensive Care Units - economics
Length of Stay - economics
Male
Management
Market trend/market analysis
Medical care, Cost of
Medical economics
Middle Aged
title The high cost of low-acuity ICU outliers
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