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      A New Approach for Understanding International Hospital Bed Numbers and Application to Local Area Bed Demand and Capacity Planning

      International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
      MDPI AG

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          Abstract

          Three models/methods are given to understand the extreme international variation in available and occupied hospital bed numbers. These models/methods all rely on readily available data. In the first, occupied beds (rather than available beds) are used to measure the expressed demand for hospital beds. The expressed occupied bed demand for three countries was in the order Australia > England > USA. Next, the age-standardized mortality rate (ASMR) has dual functions. Less developed countries/regions have low access to healthcare, which results in high ASMR, or a negative slope between ASMR versus available/occupied beds. In the more developed countries, high ASMR can also be used to measure the ‘need’ for healthcare (including occupied beds), a positive slope among various social (wealth/lifestyle) groups, which will include Indigenous peoples. In England, a 100-unit increase in ASMR (European Standard population) leads to a 15.3–30.7 (feasible range) unit increase in occupied beds per 1000 deaths. Higher ASMR shows why the Australian states of the Northern Territory and Tasmania have an intrinsic higher bed demand. The USA has a high relative ASMR (for a developed/wealthy country) because healthcare is not universal in the widest sense. Lastly, a method for benchmarking the whole hospital’s average bed occupancy which enables them to run at optimum efficiency and safety. English hospitals operate at highly disruptive and unsafe levels of bed occupancy, manifesting as high ‘turn-away’. Turn-away implies bed unavailability for the next arriving patient. In the case of occupied beds, the slope of the relationship between occupied beds per 1000 deaths and deaths per 1000 population shows a power law function. Scatter around the trend line arising from year-to-year fluctuations in occupied beds per 1000 deaths, ASMR, deaths per 1000 population, changes in the number of persons hidden in the elective, outpatient and diagnostic waiting lists, and local area variation in births affecting maternity, neonatal, and pediatric bed demand. Additional variation will arise from differences in the level of local funding for social care, especially elderly care. The problems associated with crafting effective bed planning are illustrated using the English NHS as an example.

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          Most cited references32

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          Dynamics of bed use in accommodating emergency admissions: stochastic simulation model

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            Effect of Emergency Department and ICU Occupancy on Admission Decisions and Outcomes for Critically Ill Patients

            Objectives Intensive Care Unit (ICU) admission delays can negatively affect patient outcomes, but Emergency Department (ED) volume and boarding times may also affect these decisions and associated patient outcomes. We sought to investigate the effect of ED and ICU capacity strain on ICU admission decisions, and to examine the effect of ED boarding time of critically ill patients on in-hospital mortality. Design Retrospective cohort study Setting Single academic tertiary care hospital. Patients Adult critically ill ED patients for whom a consult for Medical ICU admission was requested, over a 21-month period. Interventions None. Measurements and Main Results Patient data, including severity of illness (Mortality Probability Model on admission (MPM 0 -III)) and outcomes of mortality and persistent organ dysfunction (POD+D), as well as hourly census reports for the ED, for all ICUs and all adult wards were compiled. A total of 854 ED requests for ICU admission were logged, with 455 (53.3%) as “Accept” and 399 (46.7%) as “Deny” cases, with median ED boarding times 4.2 (IQR=2.8, 6.3) and 11.7 (3.2, 20.3) hours and similar rates of POD+D 41.5% and 44.6%, respectively. Those accepted were younger (mean±SD: 61±17 vs. 65±18 years) and more severely ill (median MPM 0 -III score= 15.3% (7.0, 29.5) vs. 13.4 (6.3, 25.2)) than those denied admission. In the multivariable model, a full Medical ICU was the only hospital-level factor significantly associated with a lower probability of ICU acceptance (OR 0.55 (95%CI: 0.37, 0.81). Using propensity score analysis to account for imbalances in baseline characteristics between those accepted or denied for ICU admission, longer ED boarding time post consult was associated with higher odds of POD+D (OR 1.77 (1.07, 2.95) per log10 hour increase). Conclusions ICU admission decisions for critically ill ED patients are affected by Medical ICU bed availability, though higher ED volume and other ICU occupancy did not play a role. Prolonged ED boarding times were associated worse patient outcomes, suggesting a need for improved throughput and targeted care for patients awaiting ICU admission.
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              Intentional injury and violence in Cape Town, South Africa: an epidemiological analysis of trauma admissions data

              Background Injury is a truly global health issue that has enormous societal and economic consequences in all countries. Interpersonal violence is now widely recognized as important global public health issues that can be addressed through evidence-based interventions. In South Africa, as in many low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), a lack of ongoing, systematic injury surveillance has limited the ability to characterize the burden of violence-related injury and to develop prevention programmes. Objective To describe the profile of trauma presenting to the trauma centre of Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa – relating to interpersonal violence, using data collected from a newly implemented surveillance system. Particular emphasis was placed on temporal aspects of injury epidemiology, as well as age and sex differentiation. Design Data were collected prospectively using a standardized trauma admissions form for all patients presenting to the trauma centre. An epidemiological analysis was conducted on 16 months of data collected from June 2010 to October 2011. Results A total of 8445 patients were included in the analysis, in which the majority were violence-related. Specifically, 35% of records included violent trauma and, of those, 75% of victims were male. There was a clear temporal pattern: a greater proportion of intentional injuries occur during the night, while unintentional injury peaks late in the afternoon. In total, two-third of all intentional trauma is inflicted on the weekends, as is 60% of unintentional trauma. Where alcohol was recorded in the record, 72% of cases involved intentional injury. Sex was again a key factor as over 80% of all records involving alcohol or substance abuse were associated with males. The findings highlighted the association between violence, young males, substance use, and weekends. Conclusions This study provides the basis for evidence-based interventions to reduce the burden of intentional injury. Furthermore, it demonstrates the value of locally appropriate, ongoing, systematic public health surveillance in LMIC.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                IJERGQ
                International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
                IJERPH
                MDPI AG
                1660-4601
                August 2024
                August 06 2024
                : 21
                : 8
                : 1035
                Article
                10.3390/ijerph21081035
                11353596
                39200645
                8b3dde67-d22d-4150-97be-4bf4b1de4de5
                © 2024

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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