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Separate and Concentrate: Accounting for Patient Complexity in General Hospitals
Author(s) -
Ludwig Kuntz,
Stefan Scholtes,
Sandra Sülz
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
management science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.954
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1526-5501
pISSN - 0025-1909
DOI - 10.1287/mnsc.2018.3064
Subject(s) - specialty , endogeneity , counterfactual thinking , operations management , medicine , medical emergency , quality (philosophy) , emergency medicine , actuarial science , business , family medicine , computer science , psychology , economics , social psychology , philosophy , epistemology , machine learning
Scholars have recently suggested the reorganization of general hospitals into organizationally separate divisions for routine and non-routine services to overcome operational misalignments between the two types of services. We provide empirical evidence for this proposal from a quality perspective, using over 250,000 patient discharge records from 60 German hospitals across 39 high-mortality disease segments, and focusing on in-hospital mortality as outcome. Disentangling the effects of high, absolute, and relative hospital volumes in a disease group, our analysis suggests that routine and complex patients would benefit from a hospital organization with a multi-specialty hub for emergency and non-routine elective services at its core, complemented by organizationally separate disease-focused hospitals-within-hospitals for routine services. We also provide evidence that the hub hospital can further improve service quality for complex patients by adopting a disease-based rather than medical specialty-based ...

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