Just why the fuck are you looking at costs before looking at the results of those costs? You Australians have to correct this fucking stupidity of your stroke world.
Changes in acute hospital costs after employing clinical facilitators to improve stroke care in Victoria, Australia
- Dominique A. CadilhacEmail authorView ORCID ID profile,
- Helen M. Dewey,
- Sonia Denisenko,
- Christopher F. Bladin and
- Atte Meretoja
BMC Health Services Research201919:41
© The Author(s). 2019
- Received: 23 July 2017
- Accepted: 18 December 2018
- Published: 18 January 2019
Abstract
Background
Hospital costs for stroke are
increasing and variability in care quality creates inefficiencies. In
2007, the Victorian Government (Australia) employed clinical
facilitators for three years in eight public hospitals to improve stroke
care.(What about the results of that stroke 'care'?) Literature on the cost implications of such roles is rare. We
report changes in the costs of acute stroke care following
implementation of this program.
Methods
Observational controlled
before-and-after cohort design. Standardised hospital costing data were
compared pre-program (financial year 2006–07) and post-program (2010–11)
for all admitted episodes of stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TIA)
using ICD-10 discharge codes. Costs in Australian dollars (AUD) were
adjusted to a common year 2010. Generalised linear regression models
were used for adjusted comparisons.
Results
A 20% increase in stroke and
TIA episodes was observed: 2624 pre-program (age > 75 years: 53%) and
3142 post-program (age > 75 years: 51%); largely explained by more
TIA admissions (up from 785 to 1072). Average length of stay reduced by
22% (pre-program 7.3 days to post-program 5.7 days, p < 0.001).
Six hospitals provided cost data. Average per-episode costs decreased
by 10% (pre-program AUD7888 to post-program AUD7115). After adjusting
for age, sex, stroke type, and hospital, average per-episode costs
decreased by 6.1% from pre to post program (p = 0.025).
When length of stay was additionally adjusted for, these costs
increased by 10.8%, indicating a greater mean cost per day (p < 0.001).
Conclusion
Cost containment of acute
inpatient episodes was observed after the implementation of stroke
clinical facilitators, likely associated with the shorter lengths of
stay. (So you pushed them out faster regardless of their lack of recovery? Good to know where the hospital priorities are. )
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