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Maximizing Interhospital Transfer Resources for Neurosurgical Patients

Overview
Journal World Neurosurg
Publisher Elsevier
Date 2017 May 28
PMID 28549644
Citations 2
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Abstract

Background: Delays in patient transfers are associated with worse outcomes for some neurosurgical conditions. One of the primary causes of transfer delay is lack of neurosurgery intensive care unit bed availability. In the present study, we characterize the results of implementing an interhospital transfer protocol to reduce unnecessary transfers and improve bed availability.

Methods: A transfer protocol was implemented in July 2012 at the Bellevue Hospital Department of Neurosurgery that screened for and prevented transfer of low-risk patients who were unlikely to require specialized inpatient neurosurgical care. The impact of this protocol was assessed with prospectively recorded data on all potential interhospital transfers from May 2011 through June 2016.

Results: Of the 1978 calls (regarding 1886 individual patients), 402 occurred before the implementation of the transfer protocol and 1576 occurred after. Before the protocol, 84.1% of transfer requests were accepted, but 15.2% were subsequently denied for bed unavailability. After the protocol, a smaller share of transfer requests were accepted after protocol screening (71.8%, P < 0.001), but only 1.9% (P < 0.001) were subsequently denied because of bed unavailability. The diagnosis demographics changed significantly (P < 0.001), with a larger share of arriving transfers suffering from aneurysms or tumors after the protocol and a smaller share suffering from stenosis/disc disease without neurological symptoms.

Conclusions: The transfer protocol implemented in the present study allowed transfer determination based on the need for specialized neurosurgical care rather than chance unavailability of beds. Developing interhospital transfer protocols may be an effective strategy to efficiently allocate limited hospital resources and improve transfer systems.

Citing Articles

Risk-Taking Behaviors of Adult Bedridden Patients in Neurosurgery: What Could/Should We Do?.

Lemaire J, Chaix R, Sontheimer A, Coste J, Cousseau M, Dubois C Front Med (Lausanne). 2021; 8:676538.

PMID: 34447760 PMC: 8382714. DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2021.676538.


Management of bed availability in intensive care in the context of hospitalization by court order.

Vargas M, Peter E, Luz K, Barlem E, Ventura C, Nascimento E Rev Lat Am Enfermagem. 2020; 28:e3271.

PMID: 32401898 PMC: 7217627. DOI: 10.1590/1518-8345.3420.3271.