Appropriateness of Short-Stay Admissions for Procedures In Six Veterans Affairs Hospitals

1991 
Admissions records were reviewed for six acute care Veterans Affairs Medical Centers (VAMC's) in New England to determine appropriateness of short-stay admissions (two days or less) in fiscal years 1986 and 1987 for certain medical and surgical procedures. Results indicated that such admissions accounted for 18,588 (22%) of a total of 84,266 admissions for the six hospitals; of these admissions, 4,362 were for procedures commonly performed on an outpatient basis. Criteria developed by a peer review board of physicians was applied to a sample of 728 (16.7%) of the 4,362 short-stay admissions for these procedures; 190 (26.1%) admissions from this sample were found to be inappropriate. Inappropriateness rates (9.1% to 46.1%), as well as the number and type of procedures, varied among the six VAMCs. Some VAMCs may be able to improve efficiency by performing more procedures on an outpatient basis.
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