Journal of Personalized Medicine (Jan 2024)

Sustainability in Internal Medicine: A Year-Long Ward-Wide Observational Study

  • Giuseppe A. Ramirez,
  • Sarah Damanti,
  • Pier Francesco Caruso,
  • Francesca Mette,
  • Gaia Pagliula,
  • Adriana Cariddi,
  • Silvia Sartorelli,
  • Elisabetta Falbo,
  • Raffaella Scotti,
  • Gaetano Di Terlizzi,
  • Lorenzo Dagna,
  • Luisa Praderio,
  • Maria Grazia Sabbadini,
  • Enrica P. Bozzolo,
  • Moreno Tresoldi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm14010115
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. 115

Abstract

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Population aging and multimorbidity challenge health system sustainability, but the role of assistance-related variables rather than individual pathophysiological factors in determining patient outcomes is unclear. To identify assistance-related determinants of sustainable hospital healthcare, all patients hospitalised in an Internal Medicine Unit (n = 1073) were enrolled in a prospective year-long observational study and split 2:1 into a training (n = 726) and a validation subset (n = 347). Demographics, comorbidities, provenance setting, estimates of complexity (cumulative illness rating scale, CIRS: total, comorbidity, CIRS-CI, and severity, CIRS-SI subscores) and intensity of care (nine equivalents of manpower score, NEMS) were analysed at individual and Unit levels along with variations in healthcare personnel as determinants of in-hospital mortality, length of stay and nosocomial infections. Advanced age, higher CIRS-SI, end-stage cancer, and the absence of immune-mediated diseases were correlated with higher mortality. Admission from nursing homes or intensive care units, dependency on activity of daily living, community- or hospital-acquired infections, oxygen support and the number of exits from the Unit along with patient/physician ratios were associated with prolonged hospitalisations. Upper gastrointestinal tract disorders, advanced age and higher CIRS-SI were associated with nosocomial infections. In addition to demographic variables and multimorbidity, physician number and assistance context affect hospitalisation outcomes and healthcare sustainability.

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