Admission characteristics of patients with short term hospitalization
Yael Frenkel Nir, Yuval Levy, Ehud Grossman, Eyal Klang

TL;DR
This study examines the characteristics of patients with short hospital stays at a large Israeli hospital to help reduce the burden on medical wards.
Contribution
The study identifies specific patient and admission patterns associated with short hospitalizations, offering actionable insights for hospital management.
Findings
Short hospitalizations were more common during night shifts and with higher ED patient loads.
Patients with cardiac and neurological complaints made up 27.4% of short hospitalizations.
Short hospitalizations had a lower 30-day mortality rate compared to longer stays.
Abstract
Sheba Medical Center (SMC) is the largest hospital in Israel and has been coping with a steady increase in total Emergency Department (ED) visits. Over 140,000 patients arrive at the SMC's ED every year. Of those, 19% are admitted to the medical wards. Some are very short hospitalizations (one night or less). This puts a heavy burden on the medical wards. We aimed to identify the characteristics of short hospitalizations. We retrospectively retrieved data of consecutive adult patients admitted to our hospital during January 1, 2013, to December 31, 2019. We limited the cohort to patients who were admitted to the medical wards. We divided the study group into those with short, those with non-short hospitalization and those who were discharged from the ED. Out of 133,126 admissions, 59,994 (45.0%) were hospitalized for short term. Patients in the short hospitalization group were younger…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmergency and Acute Care Studies · Primary Care and Health Outcomes · Healthcare Policy and Management
