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Patient characteristics, resource use and outcomes associated with general internal medicine hospital care: the General Medicine Inpatient Initiative (GEMINI) retrospective cohort study

Authors :
Janice Kwan
Irfan A Dhalla
Fahad Razak
Ross E.G. Upshur
Lauren Lapointe-Shaw
Andreas Laupacis
Robert J. Reid
Muhammad Mamdani
Peter Cram
Stephen W. Hwang
Shail Rawal
Steven Shadowitz
Terence Tang
Adina Weinerman
Yishan Guo
Amol A. Verma
Source :
CMAJ Open. 5:E842-E849
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
CMA Joule Inc., 2017.

Abstract

Background The precise scope of hospital care delivered under general internal medicine services remains poorly quantified. The purpose of this study was to describe the demographic characteristics, medical conditions, health outcomes and resource use of patients admitted to general internal medicine at 7 hospital sites in the Greater Toronto Area. Methods This was a retrospective cohort study involving all patients who were admitted to or discharged from general internal medicine at the study sites between Apr. 1, 2010, and Mar. 31, 2015. Clinical data from hospital electronic information systems were linked to administrative data from each hospital. We examined trends in resource use and patient characteristics over the study period. Results There were 136 208 admissions to general internal medicine involving 88 121 unique patients over the study period. General internal medicine admissions accounted for 38.8% of all admissions from the emergency department and 23.7% of all hospital bed-days. Over the study period, the number of admissions to general internal medicine increased by 32.4%; there was no meaningful change in the median length of stay or cost per hospital stay. The median patient age was 73 (interquartile range [IQR] 57-84) years, and the median number of coexisting conditions was 6 (IQR 3-9). The median acute length of stay was 4.6 (IQR 2.5-8.6) days, and the median total cost per hospital stay was $5850 (IQR $3915-$10 061). Patients received at least 1 computed tomography scan in 52.2% of admissions. The most common primary discharge diagnoses were pneumonia (5.0% of admissions), heart failure (4.7%), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (4.1%), urinary tract infection (4.0%) and stroke (3.6%). Interpretation Patients admitted to general internal medicine services represent a large, heterogeneous, resource-intensive and growing population. Understanding and improving general internal medicine care is essential to promote a high-quality, sustainable health care system.

Details

ISSN :
22910026
Volume :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
CMAJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....efe1f36a03dc8fe66c3c70c076279264
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.9778/cmajo.20170097