Abstract

BackgroundHospitals are constantly being challenged to provide high-quality care despite ageing populations, diminishing resources, and budgetary restraints. While the costs of care depend on the patients' needs, it is not clear which patient characteristics are associated with the demand for care and inherent costs. The aim of this study was to ascertain which patient-related characteristics or models can predict the need for medical and nursing care in general hospital settings.MethodsWe systematically searched MEDLINE, Embase, Business Source Premier and CINAHL. Pre-defined eligibility criteria were used to detect studies that explored patient characteristics and health status parameters associated to the use of hospital care services for hospitalized patients. Two reviewers independently assessed study relevance, quality with the STROBE instrument, and performed data analysis.ResultsFrom 2,168 potentially relevant articles, 17 met our eligibility criteria. These showed a large variety of factors associated with the use of hospital care services; models were found in only three studies. Age, gender, medical and nursing diagnoses, severity of illness, patient acuity, comorbidity, and complications were the characteristics found the most. Patient acuity and medical and nursing diagnoses were the most influencing characteristics. Models including medical or nursing diagnoses and patient acuity explain the variance in the use of hospital care services for at least 56.2%, and up to 78.7% when organizational factors were added.ConclusionsA larger variety of factors were found to be associated with the use of hospital care services. Models that explain the extent to which hospital care services are used should contain patient characteristics, including patient acuity, medical or nursing diagnoses, and organizational and staffing characteristics, e.g., hospital size, organization of care, and the size and skill mix of staff. This would enable healthcare managers at different levels to evaluate hospital care services and organize or reorganize patient care.

Highlights

  • As health expenditures continue to rise, hospitals are challenged to provide more efficient and affordable services without compromising on quality

  • All dissertations, the researchers received no reply to their queries for more information

  • Two authors replied to questions about their statistical analyses, but no extra data were obtained

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Summary

Introduction

As health expenditures continue to rise, hospitals are challenged to provide more efficient and affordable services without compromising on quality. Efficient and high-quality hospital care is generally determined by three aspects. Because healthcare costs and its affordability are related to the severity of a patient’s condition (need for health care), and to the services requested (demand for health care), it is important for hospital managers to identify the factors that determine the demand [5]. If these factors could be identified, managers would be able to generate information on cost issues and substantiate trends in the demand for hospital care services over time. The aim of this study was to ascertain which patient-related characteristics or models can predict the need for medical and nursing care in general hospital settings

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