1. Bedspacing and clinical outcomes in general internal medicine: A retrospective, multicenter cohort study
- Author
-
Vanessa E. Zannella, Hae Y. Jung, Michael Fralick, Lauren Lapointe‐Shaw, Jessica J. Liu, Adina Weinerman, Janice Kwan, Terence Tang, Shail Rawal, Thomas E. MacMillan, Anthony D. Bai, Sudeep Gill, Jiamin Shi, Chaim M. Bell, Fahad Razak, and Amol A. Verma
- Subjects
Cohort Studies ,Ontario ,Leadership and Management ,Health Policy ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Fundamentals and skills ,General Medicine ,Length of Stay ,Assessment and Diagnosis ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Care Planning ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Admitting hospitalized patients to off-service wards ("bedspacing") is common and may affect quality of care and patient outcomes.To compare in-hospital mortality, 30-day readmission to general internal medicine (GIM), and hospital length-of-stay among GIM patients admitted to GIM wards or bedspaced to off-service wards.Retrospective cohort study including all emergency department admissions to GIM between 2015 and 2017 at six hospitals in Ontario, Canada. We compared patients admitted to GIM wards with those who were bedspaced, using multivariable regression models and propensity score matching to control for patient and situational factors.Among 40,440 GIM admissions, 10,745 (26.6%) were bedspaced to non-GIM wards and 29,695 (73.4%) were assigned to GIM wards. After multivariable adjustment, bedspacing was associated with no significant difference in mortality (adjusted hazard ratio 0.95, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.86-1.05, p = .304), slightly shorter median hospital length-of-stay (-0.10 days, 95% CI:-0.20 to -0.001, p = .047) and lower 30-day readmission to GIM (adjusted OR 0.89, 95% CI: 0.83-0.95, p = .001). Results were consistent when examining each hospital individually and outcomes did not significantly differ between medical or surgical off-service wards. Sensitivity analyses focused on the highest risk patients did not exclude the possibility of harm associated with bedspacing, although adverse outcomes were not significantly greater.Overall, bedspacing was associated with no significant difference in mortality, slightly shorter hospital length-of-stay, and fewer 30-day readmissions to GIM, although potential harms in high-risk patients remain uncertain. Given that hospital capacity issues are likely to persist, future research should aim to understand how bedspacing can be achieved safely at all hospitals, perhaps by strengthening the selection of low-risk patients.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF