Impact of a hospital policy to redistribute admission flow across clinical services for capacity relief during COVID-19 surges

J Hosp Med. 2023 Jul;18(7):568-575. doi: 10.1002/jhm.13058. Epub 2023 Feb 14.

Abstract

Background: Increased hospital admissions due to COVID-19 place a disproportionate strain on inpatient general medicine service (GMS) capacity compared to other services.

Objective: To study the impact on capacity and safety of a hospital-wide policy to redistribute admissions from GMS to non-GMS based on admitting diagnosis during surge periods.

Design, setting, and participants: Retrospective case-controlled study at a large teaching hospital. The intervention included adult patients admitted to general care wards during two surge periods (January-February 2021 and 2022) whose admission diagnosis was impacted by the policy. The control cohort included admissions during a matched number of days preceding the intervention.

Main outcomes and measures: Capacity measures included average daily admissions and hospital census occupied on GMS. Safety measures included length of stay (LOS) and adverse outcomes (death, rapid response, floor-to-intensive care unit transfer, and 30-day readmission).

Results: In the control cohort, there were 365 encounters with 299 (81.9%) GMS admissions and 66 (18.1%) non-GMS versus the intervention with 384 encounters, including 94 (24.5%) GMS admissions and 290 (75.5%) non-GMS (p < .001). The average GMS census decreased from 17.9 and 21.5 during control periods to 5.5 and 8.5 during intervention periods. An interrupted time series analysis confirmed a decrease in GMS daily admissions (p < .001) and average daily hospital census (p = .014; p < .001). There were no significant differences in LOS (5.9 vs. 5.9 days, p = .059) or adverse outcomes (53, 14.5% vs. 63, 16.4%; p = .482).

Conclusion: Admission redistribution based on diagnosis is a safe lever to reduce capacity strain on GMS during COVID-19 surges.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • COVID-19* / epidemiology
  • COVID-19* / therapy
  • Hospitalization
  • Hospitals, Teaching
  • Humans
  • Length of Stay
  • Patient Admission*
  • Retrospective Studies