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Managing the increasing shortage of acute care hospital beds in Israel
Author(s) -
Meydan Chanan,
Haklai Ziona,
Gordon Barak,
Mendlovic Joseph,
Afek Ar
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of evaluation in clinical practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.737
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1365-2753
pISSN - 1356-1294
DOI - 10.1111/jep.12246
Subject(s) - medicine , economic shortage , demographics , health care , christian ministry , emergency medicine , healthcare system , geriatrics , hospital bed , multidisciplinary approach , acute care , family medicine , demography , nursing , linguistics , philosophy , social science , theology , psychiatry , sociology , government (linguistics) , economics , economic growth
Rationale, aims and objectives I srael's healthcare system has been facing increasing hospital bed shortage over the last few decades. Community‐based services and shortening length of stay have helped to ease this problem, but hospitals continue to suffer from serious overload and saturation. The objective of this study is to present hospitalization trends in I srael's internal medicine departments. Methods The data is based on the National Hospital Discharges database ( NHDR ) in the I sraeli Health Ministry, pertaining to hospitalizations in all internal medicine departments nationwide between 2000 and 2012. Results Total yearly hospitalization days, representing healthcare burden, had increased by 4.2% during the study period, driven mainly by the most advanced age groups. The rate of total hospitalization days per 100,000 people for all the age groups has decreased by 17.6%, but the oldest patient group had a modest reduction in comparison (7.5%). The parameter of age correlated with length of stay and readmission rates, and neither decreased during the surveyed years. Conclusions These results demonstrated that the healthcare burden on acute internal medicine services has been reduced mostly for middle‐aged populations but only modestly for elderly populations. The length of hospital stay and the readmission rates have reached and maintained a plateau in recent years, regardless of age. The findings of this study call for planning specific to elderly populations in light of changing demographics. Possible directions may include renewed emphasis on internal medicine and geriatric medicine, and efforts to shorten hospitalization time by extended utilization of multidisciplinary primary care.