Reduction in Hospital Transfers at a US COVID-19 Alternate Care Site: Maintaining Surge Capacity Support in Imperial County, California

The transfer rate for patients from an Alternate Care Site (ACS) back to a hospital may serve as a metric of appropriate patient selection and the ability of an ACS to treat moderate to severely ill patients accepted from overwhelmed health-care systems. During the coronavirus infectious disease 201...

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Veröffentlicht in:Disaster medicine and public health preparedness 2023-01, Vol.17, p.e231-e231, Article e231
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Frank W., Meghoo, Colin A., Staats, Katherine L., Hayes, Elizabeth Perkins, Metzner, Mitch, Sobel, Julia, Hultquist, Eric, Noste, Erin E., Wright, Charles E., Devereaux, Asha, Backer, Howard
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container_title Disaster medicine and public health preparedness
container_volume 17
creator Zhang, Frank W.
Meghoo, Colin A.
Staats, Katherine L.
Hayes, Elizabeth Perkins
Metzner, Mitch
Sobel, Julia
Hultquist, Eric
Noste, Erin E.
Wright, Charles E.
Devereaux, Asha
Backer, Howard
description The transfer rate for patients from an Alternate Care Site (ACS) back to a hospital may serve as a metric of appropriate patient selection and the ability of an ACS to treat moderate to severely ill patients accepted from overwhelmed health-care systems. During the coronavirus infectious disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, hospitals worldwide experienced acute surges of patients presenting with acute respiratory failure. An ACS in Imperial County, California was re-established in November 2020 to help decompress 2 local hospitals experiencing surges of COVID-19 cases. The patients treated often had multiple comorbid illnesses and required a median supplemental oxygen of 3 L/min (LPM) on admission. Numerous interventions were initiated during a 2-wk period to improve clinical care delivery. The objectives of this retrospective observational study are to evaluate the impact of these clinical and staff interventions at an ACS on the transfer rate and to provide issues to consider for future ACS sites managing COVID-19 patients. The data suggest that continuous, real-time process-improvement interventions helped reduce the transfer rate back to hospitals from 36.7% to 14.5% and that an ACS is a viable option for managing symptomatic COVID-19 positive patients requiring hospital-level care when hospitals are overburdened.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/dmp.2022.166
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subjects Body mass index
Communicable Diseases
COVID-19
COVID-19 - epidemiology
COVID-19 - therapy
Critical Care
Diabetes
Disease
Emergency medical care
Health care
Hospitals
Humans
Hypertension
Illnesses
Infectious diseases
Length of stay
Observational studies
Original Research
Pandemics
Patients
Public health
Respiratory failure
Review boards
Sea level
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
Statistical analysis
Surge Capacity
Surges
Workforce planning
title Reduction in Hospital Transfers at a US COVID-19 Alternate Care Site: Maintaining Surge Capacity Support in Imperial County, California
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