M. Hiller, K. Spohn, J. Schütte, H. Bracht, Laura Hering, J. Bakker, S. Schröder
{"title":"合理部署标准和主动部署管理来控制高精卫医疗能力","authors":"M. Hiller, K. Spohn, J. Schütte, H. Bracht, Laura Hering, J. Bakker, S. Schröder","doi":"10.19224/AI2020.569","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Despite the high number of intensive care beds in German hospitals compared to other European countries, intensive care medical shortages are common in daily clinical practice. This is due to a hardly established cross-departmental discharge and transfer management with missing objective discharge criteria, lack of personnel and bed closures. Aboveaverage lengths of stays and increased readmission rates to the intensive care unit also indicate an inefficient use of resources in German hospitals. Against this background, a systematic literature search was carried out on the current state of research on discharge criteria from the intensive care unit and transfer processes to follow-up wards. Between 1983 and 2020, 1,917 sources were found, 286 were selected as full text, 104 of which were considered relevant and used as the basis for this work. Approaches, such as a root cause analy- sis of bottleneck situations including the entire hospital system with its interdependent admission, transfer and discharge processes, and the use of electronic decision support in conjunction with standardised discharge criteria can improve the use of existing intensive care capacities and lead to safer and better patient flow. For better use of resources, the therapeutic outcome must be viewed along the entire clinical pathway in order to care for the right patient at the right place and at the right time. A standardised care transition management using objective discharge criteria could help to include the various stakeholders in the discharge decision and patient-transfer process to reflect patient-, caregiver-, process, and institution-specific factors, and ultimately to manage, proactively and efficiently, the available intensive care resources. Decision support in the discharge process using self-learning systems based on available data from patient data management systems is forward-looking, but must be validated more widely in clinical practice.","PeriodicalId":55516,"journal":{"name":"Anasthesiologie & Intensivmedizin","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2020-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Objektive Verlegungskriterien und proaktives Verlegungsmanagement zur Steuerung von intensivmedizinischen Kapazitäten\",\"authors\":\"M. Hiller, K. Spohn, J. Schütte, H. Bracht, Laura Hering, J. Bakker, S. Schröder\",\"doi\":\"10.19224/AI2020.569\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Despite the high number of intensive care beds in German hospitals compared to other European countries, intensive care medical shortages are common in daily clinical practice. This is due to a hardly established cross-departmental discharge and transfer management with missing objective discharge criteria, lack of personnel and bed closures. Aboveaverage lengths of stays and increased readmission rates to the intensive care unit also indicate an inefficient use of resources in German hospitals. Against this background, a systematic literature search was carried out on the current state of research on discharge criteria from the intensive care unit and transfer processes to follow-up wards. Between 1983 and 2020, 1,917 sources were found, 286 were selected as full text, 104 of which were considered relevant and used as the basis for this work. Approaches, such as a root cause analy- sis of bottleneck situations including the entire hospital system with its interdependent admission, transfer and discharge processes, and the use of electronic decision support in conjunction with standardised discharge criteria can improve the use of existing intensive care capacities and lead to safer and better patient flow. For better use of resources, the therapeutic outcome must be viewed along the entire clinical pathway in order to care for the right patient at the right place and at the right time. A standardised care transition management using objective discharge criteria could help to include the various stakeholders in the discharge decision and patient-transfer process to reflect patient-, caregiver-, process, and institution-specific factors, and ultimately to manage, proactively and efficiently, the available intensive care resources. 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Objektive Verlegungskriterien und proaktives Verlegungsmanagement zur Steuerung von intensivmedizinischen Kapazitäten
Despite the high number of intensive care beds in German hospitals compared to other European countries, intensive care medical shortages are common in daily clinical practice. This is due to a hardly established cross-departmental discharge and transfer management with missing objective discharge criteria, lack of personnel and bed closures. Aboveaverage lengths of stays and increased readmission rates to the intensive care unit also indicate an inefficient use of resources in German hospitals. Against this background, a systematic literature search was carried out on the current state of research on discharge criteria from the intensive care unit and transfer processes to follow-up wards. Between 1983 and 2020, 1,917 sources were found, 286 were selected as full text, 104 of which were considered relevant and used as the basis for this work. Approaches, such as a root cause analy- sis of bottleneck situations including the entire hospital system with its interdependent admission, transfer and discharge processes, and the use of electronic decision support in conjunction with standardised discharge criteria can improve the use of existing intensive care capacities and lead to safer and better patient flow. For better use of resources, the therapeutic outcome must be viewed along the entire clinical pathway in order to care for the right patient at the right place and at the right time. A standardised care transition management using objective discharge criteria could help to include the various stakeholders in the discharge decision and patient-transfer process to reflect patient-, caregiver-, process, and institution-specific factors, and ultimately to manage, proactively and efficiently, the available intensive care resources. Decision support in the discharge process using self-learning systems based on available data from patient data management systems is forward-looking, but must be validated more widely in clinical practice.
期刊介绍:
Die „Anästhesiologie & Intensivmedizin“ (A&I) ist mit einer Auflage von rund 27.000 Exemplaren (IVW-geprüft) die auflagenstärkste Fachzeitschrift im deutschen AINS-Markt.
Die A&I informiert die in diesem Fachgebiet tätige ärztliche Berufsgruppe monatlich (mit Ausnahme einer, im August erscheinenden Doppelausgabe Juli/August) über aktuelle Entwicklungen in der Anästhesiologie mit ihren vier Säulen – Anästhesie, Intensivmedizin, Notfallmedizin und Schmerztherapie und wendet sich an Anästhesistinnen und Anästhesisten in Klinik, Praxis und Forschung.
Die A&I ist offizielles Organ der anästhesiologischen Verbände in Deutschland und damit unter anderem „Pflichtlektüre“ für Führungskräfte und Entscheidungsträger in anästhesiologischen Krankenhausabteilungen und Praxen.