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Tempering pediatric hospitalist supervision of residents improves admission process efficiency without decreasing quality of care
Author(s) -
Biondi Eric A.,
Leonard Michael S.,
Nocera Elizabeth,
Chen Rui,
Arora Jyoti,
Alverson Brian
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of hospital medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.128
H-Index - 65
eISSN - 1553-5606
pISSN - 1553-5592
DOI - 10.1002/jhm.2138
Subject(s) - medicine , hospital medicine , emergency medicine , rapid response team , emergency department , cohort , medical emergency , pediatrics , family medicine , psychiatry
BACKGROUND Many academic pediatric hospital medicine (PHM) divisions have recently increased in‐house supervision of residents, often providing 24/7 in‐house attending coverage. Contrary to this trend, we removed mandated PHM attending input during the admission process. We present an evaluation of this process change. METHODS This cohort study compared outcomes between patients admitted to the PHM service before (July 1, 2011–September 30, 2011) and after (July 1, 2012–September 30, 2012) the process change. We evaluated time from admission request to inpatient orders, length of stay (LOS), frequency of change in antibiotic choice, and rapid response team (RRT) calls within 24 hours of admission. Data were obtained via chart abstraction and from administrative databases. Wilcoxon rank sum and Fisher exact tests were used for analysis. RESULTS We identified 182 and 210 admissions in the before and after cohorts, respectively. Median time between emergency department admission request and inpatient orders was significantly shorter after the change (123 vs 62 minutes, P  < 0.001). We found no significant difference in LOS, the number of changes to initial resident antibiotic choice, standard of care, or RRTs called within the first 24 hours of admission. CONCLUSION Removing mandated attending input in decision making for PHM admissions significantly decreased time to inpatient resident admission orders without a change in measurable clinical outcomes. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2014;9:106–110. © 2013 Society of Hospital Medicine

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