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Hospital Capacity and Emergency Hospital Capacity and Emergency Department Diversion: Department Diversion:
Four Community Case StudiesFour Community Case Studies
AHA Survey Results
April 2004
2
Executive Summary This report includes the findings from the second of two studies
initiated by the American Hospital Association (AHA) on emergency department (ED) capacity constraints and ambulance diversions.1
This study seeks to look specifically at communities’ hospital capacity and how it changes by day and time of day to get a better understanding of the multiple factors that are leading to ED diversions.
28 hospitals in 4 communities were asked to track inpatient and ED capacity as well as ED diversions at various times over a three day period.
Over 50 percent of hospitals in each community reported that their EDs were “at” or “over” capacity.
All communities experienced some level of ambulance diversion, though hours on diversion varied by community.
This study illustrates the difficulty hospitals face in anticipating and responding to changing demand.
1Times when hospital emergency departments cannot accept all or specific types of patients by ambulance.
3
Executive Summary (continued) While lack of critical care beds was the most common reason for
diversion, the specific causes of diversion varied by community and by hospital at specific points in time.
Other factors that led to diversion included: ED overcrowding
Staff shortages
Closure of other facilities
RN vacancy rates by community were generally higher in the ED than in the facility as a whole and hospitals with the highest rates of diversion had higher RN vacancy rates.
Hospitals reporting being “at” or “over” capacity in the ED had longer waiting and boarding times.
Average occupancy based on a midnight census fails to reflect volume fluctuations by day and time of day.
4
Background & Purpose In 2002, the AHA conducted a national survey of hospitals to get a
better understanding of the growing problem of emergency room capacity constraints and ED diversions. This national study found that:
Nearly 80 percent of urban hospitals described their EDs as "at" or "over" capacity1
More than half of urban hospitals reported time on diversion1
This current study, the AHA Daily ED and Hospital Capacity Survey, is a follow-on study to the national survey conducted in 2002. The purpose of this study is to look specifically at communities’ hospital capacity to get a better understanding of the multiple factors that are leading to ED diversions. Specifically, this study seeks to:
Show how the traditional “midnight census” fails to capture the variability in hospital activity
Determine where back-ups tend to occur within the hospital
Explore how diversion situations develop across a community
1 Findings from “Emergency Department Overload: A Growing Crisis, April 2002”
5
Study Approach: Survey Design AHA Daily ED and Hospital Capacity Survey involved hospital
staff tracking ED and hospital volume over a three day period at three times of day:
11 a.m. 6 p.m. Midnight
Survey questions probed the following areas: Annual ED and inpatient volume and capacity data Current RN vacancy rates Point-in-time Measures: Number of staffed ED treatment
areas, ED census, number of ED patients waiting to be seen, number of ED boarders1, hospital inpatient census
Daily Measures: ED Diversion tracking by frequency and type, RN hours worked, average waiting times, average boarding times
Hospital perceptions of ED capacity issues1Admitted patients waiting in the ED for an inpatient bed
6
The sites for this study were selected from those cities identified during the 2002 national survey as having significant levels of ED diversions.
Urban areas were chosen to allow information collection from the entire community (no more than 10 hospitals).
Cities were selected where at least one hospital had reported being “over” capacity or on diversion for > 20% of time
Of the cities from the first survey meeting these criteria, we selected four from different geographic regions across the US:
Louisville, Kentucky
Portland, Oregon
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
El Paso, Texas
Study Approach: Site Selection
7
AHA invited all hospitals in all four communities to participate in this three day survey of ED and hospital capacity.
The survey was pilot-tested in three Harrisburg hospitals in November 2002. Revisions were made to the survey instrument based on participant feedback.
The survey was fielded in all hospitals in the remaining three communities in late January 2003.
The surveys were distributed to hospital contacts prior to the survey period. In addition, The Lewin Group reviewed survey content with each hospital via conference call prior to the survey period.
After completion of survey period, hospital contacts returned survey results via fax and mail to The Lewin Group for analysis.
The Lewin Group entered all survey data into a database and analyzed them to identify patterns and trends. Hospitals were asked to clarify any data that were unclear.
Data Limitations: Small sample – only 28 hospitals studied. Limited timeframe – three days in Nov. (pilot) and three days in Jan. Missing data – not all hospitals responded to all questions.
Study Approach: Methods & Analysis
8
Findings
9
The majority of hospitals in each community reported being “at” or “over” capacity.
Percentage of Hospitals “At” or “Over” Capacity in Their Emergency Departments By Community
28.6%
33.3%
33.3%
22.2%
28.6%
33.3%
22.2%
33.3%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70%
El Paso
Harrisburg
Portland
Louisville
At Capacity Over Capacity
10
One third of hospitals were on diversion for more than 20% of the three day period.
Percentage of Hospitals By Time on Diversion
32.1%
10.7%
32.1%
25.0%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35%
20% of time ormore
10-19.9% of time
Up to 9.9% of time
No diversion time
11
Harrisburg exhibited the most severe diversion problem.
Average Percent of Time on Diversion During 3-Day Period
By Community
19.0%
32.3%
15.3%
15.7%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35%
El Paso
Harrisburg
Portland
Louisville
12
Lack of critical care capacity and ED overcrowding were the most common reasons for diversion.
Reasons for Diversion By CommunityP
erce
nt
of
Div
ersi
on
s b
y R
eas
on
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Louisville Portland Harrisburg El Paso
Other
Closure ofOther Facilities
Staff Shortages
EDOvercrowding
Lack of CriticalCare Capacity
Capacity constraints elsewhere in the hospital—particularly in critical care units—can lead to back-
ups in the ED.
13
This study illustrates the difficulty of anticipating and responding to changes in demand.
One hospital had 2.6 patients per critical care bed at one point--nearly three times the demand of a day earlier.
At 11:00 AM Monday, one hospital had a ratio of five patients per staffed ED treatment area1; at the same time Tuesday this ratio was one.
At one point Louisville had 65 patients boarding across its nine hospitals.
One hospital’s general acute care occupancy ranged from a low of 55% to a high of 106% during the three day period.
1Number of patients in staffed treatment areas and in ED waiting room divided by number of staffed treatment areas.
14
Across the communities, over half of admissions were unscheduled.
A high proportion of unscheduled admissions limits the ability to alter the pattern of scheduled
admissions to smooth demand.
Percent Unscheduled Admissions By Community
67.9%
71.4%
53.6%
62.0%
77.1%
37.2%
68.8%
63.1%
59.5%
89.6%
66.4%
58.8%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
El Paso
Harrisburg
Portland
LouisvilleMon
Tues
Wed
15
In three communities, RN vacancy rates are higher in the ED than in the ICU.
RN Vacancy Rates By Community
RN Vacancy Rate
13.0%
24.0%
7.6%
17.7%
21.9%
7.3%
17.5%
19.5%
16.5%
7.9%
12.5%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30%
El Paso
Harrisburg
Portland
Louisville
TotalVacancyRate
ICU VacancyRate
ED VacancyRate
16
High diversion rates appear to be associated with high RN vacancy rates.
Average RN Vacancy Rates By Hospital Diversion Category
Vacancy Rate
11.2%
13.8%
16.6%
13.8%
19.7%
15.8%
17.4%
13.4%
15.3%
9.0%
17.3%
10.7%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25%
20% of time ormore
10-19.9% of time
Up to 9.9% oftime
No diversion time
OverallVacancy Rate
ICU VacancyRate
ED VacancyRate
17
Capacity constraints were associated with longer waiting times for patients…
Average Waiting Time (in minutes)By Assessed Capacity Level
Minutes
8
36
59
96
8
32
40
78
8
33
67
91
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
Under Capacity
Good Balance
At Capacity
Over Capacity
Mon
Tues
Wed
18
…and longer ED boarding times.
Average Boarding Time (in hours)By Assessed Capacity Level
Hours
2.0
2.4
3.8
4.9
1.5
2.1
2.8
6.7
3.0
1.9
4.1
4.2
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Under Capacity
Good Balance
At Capacity
Over Capacity
Mon
Tues
Wed
19
The percentage of patients who left without being seen was not related to perceived capacity levels.
Average Percentage of Patients Who Left Without Being Seen
By Assessed Capacity Level
Percent of Total Patients
9.1%
3.2%
4.7%
5.7%
0.0%
2.4%
3.4%
3.9%
4.8%
3.2%
7.1%
4.0%
0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10%
Under Capacity
Good Balance
At Capacity
Over Capacity
Mon
Tues
Wed
20
Hospitals cited a number of underlying factors as contributing to ED diversions.
Bed closures
Pressures to be efficient have led to less “stand-by” capacity to accommodate spikes in demand in inpatient units; when inpatient units are full, back-ups occur in the ED as patient boarders occupy treatment space
Closures of psychiatric beds have been a particular concern in Harrisburg where large numbers of psychiatric boarders frequently lead to ED diversion
Large indigent population—in El Paso, large immigrant population crossing the border for care—for whom the ED is a guaranteed access point for care
Population growth has led to increased demand for ED services
Lack of community resources for Medicaid patients leads to increased use of the ED for primary care
Lack of physicians in certain areas leads to higher use of the ED for routine care
21
Creating a community-wide diversion committee to coordinate ED capacity and patient flow
Improving communication both within and among hospitals
Increasing the threshold for diversion – continuing to accept patients in instances when hospitals would have been on diversion in the past
Expanding non-urgent care capacity
Expanding inpatient capacity—particularly critical care or telemetry
Conducting utilization review to ensure patients are transferred efficiently from critical to acute care to hospital discharge to ensure availability of beds for new patients
Study suggests operational changes and community collaboration can ensure resources are used most efficiently and provide some relief. But these efforts may need to be combined with increased capacity in the ED and inpatient units.
Hospitals and communities reported taking a number of actions to reduce ED diversions.
22
Portland and Harrisburg reported improvement in the diversion situation since last year.
Percent of Hospitals that Noted Diversion Increased, Decreased, or Stayed the Same, 2001 vs. 2002
Percent of Hospitals
66.7%
0.0%
12.5%
25.0%
16.7%
66.7%
87.5%
37.5%
16.7%
33.3%
0.0%
37.5%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
El Paso
Harrisburg
Portland
Louisville
Number ofDiversionsIncreased
Number ofDiversionsDecreased
Number ofDiversionsStayed thesame
23
Conclusions Capacity constraints and ambulance diversions continue to be
concerns of the hospitals in the communities studied. No two communities are alike in terms of the specific factors
that drive these concerns. Even within a hospital the specific capacity issue leading to
diversion differed across the period studied. The midnight census as a marker of hospital capacity overlooks
daily fluctuations in demand and supply. Perceptions of being “at” or “over” capacity in the emergency
room appear to correlate with longer ED patient and boarder wait times, but not with the number of patients leaving EDs without being seen.
Hospitals in the sample with more time on diversion also reported higher RN vacancy rates in ICUs.
Study suggests operational changes and community collaboration can provide some relief, but may need to be combined with increased capacity in the ED and inpatient units.