BMC Health Services Research (Apr 2019)

Integrative hospital treatment in older patients to benchmark and improve outcome and length of stay – the In-HospiTOOL study

  • Alexander Kutz,
  • Daniel Koch,
  • Antoinette Conca,
  • Ciril Baechli,
  • Sebastian Haubitz,
  • Katharina Regez,
  • Ursula Schild,
  • Zeljka Caldara,
  • Fahim Ebrahimi,
  • Stefano Bassetti,
  • Jens Eckstein,
  • Juerg Beer,
  • Michael Egloff,
  • Vladimir Kaplan,
  • Tobias Ehmann,
  • Claus Hoess,
  • Heinz Schaad,
  • Ulrich Wagner,
  • Sabina de Geest,
  • Philipp Schuetz,
  • Beat Mueller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-019-4045-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background A comprehensive in-hospital patient management with reasonable and economic resource allocation is arguably the major challenge of health-care systems worldwide, especially in elderly, frail, and polymorbid patients. The need for patient management tools to improve the transition process and allocation of health care resources in routine clinical care particularly for the inpatient setting is obvious. To address these issues, a large prospective trial is warranted. Methods The “Integrative Hospital Treatment in Older patients to benchmark and improve Outcome and Length of stay” (In-HospiTOOL) study is an investigator-initiated, multicenter effectiveness trial to compare the effects of a novel in-hospital management tool on length of hospital stay, readmission rate, quality of care, and other clinical outcomes using a time-series model. The study aims to include approximately 35`000 polymorbid medical patients over an 18-month period, divided in an observation, implementation, and intervention phase. Detailed data on treatment and outcome of polymorbid medical patients during the in-hospital stay and after 30 days will be gathered to investigate differences in resource use, inter-professional collaborations and to establish representative benchmarking data to promote measurement and display of quality of care data across seven Swiss hospitals. The trial will inform whether the “In-HospiTOOL” optimizes inter-professional collaboration and thereby reduces length of hospital stay without harming subjective and objective patient-oriented outcome markers. Discussion Many of the current quality-mirroring tools do not reflect the real need and use of resources, especially in polymorbid and elderly patients. In addition, a validated tool for optimization of patient transition and discharge processes is still missing. The proposed multicenter effectiveness trial has potential to improve interprofessional collaboration and optimizes resource allocation from hospital admission to discharge. The results will enable inter-hospital comparison of transition processes and accomplish a benchmarking for inpatient care quality.

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