Abstract

IntroductionED overcrowding and boarding is a global phenomenon that negatively affects patients, hospital staff, and hospital-wide operations. Poor patient flow has been identified as a major contributing factor to ED overcrowding and boarding, which is directly linked to negative patient outcomes. This project implemented a multidisciplinary rounding team that addressed barriers to patient flow in real time. By reducing the inpatient length of stay bed capacity will improve, which in turn will help alleviate ED boarding and overcrowding. MethodsThis before-and-after process improvement project took place on a 30-bed, inpatient medicine floor of a level-I trauma, tertiary, regional transfer center. Multidisciplinary rounding was used to improve care team communication and collaboration. Concepts from a Real-Time Demand Capacity model were used in this project to help develop a plan for capacity issues regarding bed supply and demand. Outcome variables included inpatient length of stay and ED boarding hours. ResultsImplementation of multidisciplinary rounding resulted in a statistically significant reduction of 0.83 days in the length of stay for patients on this floor. By increasing inpatient bed capacity, ED boarding hours for patients targeted to the 3000-medicine floor was reduced by an average of 8.83 hours per month, a reduction > 50% from baseline. DiscussionIncreasing inpatient bed capacity helps decrease ED access block, and contributes to reducing ED overcrowding. Implementing a daily multidisciplinary rounding structure on the inpatient floor helped hospital throughput by expediting discharges, which in turn created inpatient bed capacity.

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