Smarter measures for general medicine are needed to improve hospital access
“What gets measured gets done” — WE Deming
Our acute hospitals should look to general medical units for help in solving our current hospital access crisis. They are where to find many beds that we so desperately need. General medical units are the largest users of acute, multiday inpatient beds, caring for up to one‐third of all adult multiday medical admissions in some states.1 A general medicine service in a metropolitan hospital typically has about 100 inpatients with an average length of stay of 5 or more days. Hence, as little as a 10%, or half a day, reduction in length of stay would provide ten beds for other patients without requiring infrastructure costs. Why is there so much talk about saving hours and minutes in emergency departments when general medicine lengths of stay are measured in days; an order‐of‐magnitude greater opportunity to release beds?
Such improvements should be achievable. Eleven percent of multiday inpatients in a Melbourne public hospital were recently categorised as no longer needing to be in an acute care environment, with many having the characteristics of general medicine patients.2 An additional proportion of general medicine patients could have received some of the acute phase of their care at home if better home‐based services had been in place.2 The paucity of this kind of published data regarding general medicine’s inpatient bed utilisation exemplifies how this specialty “flies under the radar” despite its central role in Australian health care. So why aren’t general medicine units at the front of the queue for support to help resolve our current access crisis?
One likely reason is the difficulty in providing meaningful data for evaluation of general medicine care.3 Compared with other large units such as intensive care, trauma services and many of the surgical specialties, general medicine lacks registry data to evaluate care and guide improvement.4 General medicine instead relies mainly on the usual suspects: hospital length of stay, readmission rates, inpatient mortality, individual ad hoc clinical audits, some data on hospital‐acquired complications, and compliance with our excellent national quality standards to evaluate its performance. Disease‐specific indicators for common chronic conditions such as heart failure and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, although helpful, do not clearly reflect the impact of the multiple comorbidities including cognitive, social, addiction and mental health problems that are so common for general medicine patients.3
What data could help? The Box outlines a suggested framework of goals, actions and measures for improvement of general medicine care and bed utilisation. The framework is derived from the literature and my many conversations with local, national and international colleagues, guided by the principle that one should “Set up what you do to reinforce what it is you want to achieve” (personal communication, Matt Hill, United Kingdom National Health Service, June 2021).
The first goal is to develop a culture of excellence in meeting the acute and chronic needs of patients that also prioritises home‐first care. Many inpatient clinicians have never provided a home visit and are not fully conversant with the risks and benefits of home‐based care. To the uninitiated, general medicine care demands familiarity with a complex web of services, all with different acronyms and criteria for accepting patients. Inexperienced staff facing this complexity are at risk of procrastination or worse; making inappropriate referrals that cause long and costly delays in care. These staff are likely to make sounder decisions regarding home care if they have colleagues experienced in home care at their side.2 Specific actions and measures are proposed in the Box, with the most important measure being local development of a robust, independent estimate of the proportion of patients whose admission and ongoing days of stay might have been avoided.2 A similar approach should identify critical bottlenecks and barriers to progression of care, an essential component of improving flow.
The second goal is to make it easier for general medicine clinicians and patients to “do the right thing”. General medical units are rightly regarded as excellent in‐ and out‐of‐hours training rotations for medical interns, junior registrars and trainees of other disciplines. Junior staff need practicable jobs with sustainable rosters and workloads as well as good supervision. They should be counterbalanced by well resourced, experienced staff who have time to teach. A general medicine team to support acute step‐up and step‐down care in conjunction with home‐based services and general practitioners is needed.5 A bedside learning coordinator role should be explored to systematically gather experience‐based insights for improvement from frontline staff and rapidly foster cross‐team collaboration.9 Excellence in interdisciplinary teamwork and communication are core relational competencies for general medicine clinicians; we should adopt models that develop these competencies, and utilise measurement scales to evaluate them.10
The third goal is to encourage investment by health service boards and our Departments of Health in the resourcing and improvement of general medicine care to fast track these actions. As long as patients are not being harmed and staff are not breaking down, general medicine units do not get the attention that their activity warrants. Boards need to ask questions like: “How do we know how good our care is for complex medical patients?”, “How good are we at deciding who can receive care at home?” and “What systems and processes are in place to ensure that we are using our beds wisely?”.
Our general medicine units and their patients are integral components of the complex, adaptive systems of health care that require deep understanding for sustainable improvement. If health service boards and our state health departments choose to further extend their remit beyond “ensuring that ‘as few things as possible go wrong’ to ensuring that ‘as many things as possible go right’”,13 then using incisive measurement tools to uncover and act on opportunities to improve general medicine units (Box) is a good place to start. They will discover an abundance of discretionary energy to unlock the beds we need, to the benefit of our patients and dedicated staff.
During the recent crisis of coronavirus disease 2019 outbreaks in residential aged care facilities, the Victorian and Commonwealth Departments of Health rapidly collaborated with health services and many clinical disciplines to establish the Victorian Aged Care Response Centre.15 We need similar timely leadership, collaboration and investment in our general medicine units to help resolve this access crisis.
Box – General medicine actions and evaluations to add to standard practice
Goal |
Specific actions |
Evaluations |
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A. Develop a culture of excellence in meeting the needs of patients that increases the proportion of acute and chronic care that can safely be provided at home |
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B. Make it easier for clinicians and patients to “do the right thing” |
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C. Encourage investment in general medicine by boards and health departments through better quality assurance |
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GP = general practitioner. * Potential key performance measures. |
Provenance: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
- 1. Statewide General Medicine Network. Reducing low benefit care. Brisbane: Queensland Health, 2020. https://www.imsanz.org.au/documents/item/1337 (viewed Apr 2021).
- 2. Lim SM, Island L, Horsburgh A, Maier AB. Home first! Identification of hospitalized patients for home‐based models of care. J Am Med Dir Assoc 2021; 22: 413–417.
- 3. Werner RM, Greenfield S, Fung C, Turner BJ. Measuring quality of care in patients With multiple clinical conditions: summary of a conference conducted by the Society of General Internal Medicine. J Gen Intern Med 2007; 22: 1206–1211.
- 4. Wilcox N, McNeil JJ. Clinical quality registries have the potential to drive improvements in the appropriateness of care. Med J Aust 2016; 205: 21–26. https://www.mja.com.au/journal/2016/205/10/clinical‐quality‐registries‐have‐potential‐drive‐improvements‐appropriateness
- 5. Levine DM, Ouchi K, Blanchfield B, et al. Hospital‐level care at home for acutely ill adults: a randomized controlled trial. Ann Intern Med 2020; 172: 77–85.
- 6. Wales K, Clemson L, Lannin N, Cameron I. Functional assessments used by occupational therapists with older adults at risk of activity and participation limitations: a systematic review. PLoS One 2016; 11: e0147980.
- 7. Robertson‐Preidler J, Biller‐Andorno N, Johnson TJ. What is appropriate care? An integrative review of emerging themes in the literature. BMC Health Serv Res 2017; 17: 452.
- 8. Kremers MNT, Zaalberg T, Van Den Ende ES, et al. Patient’s perspective on improving the quality of acute medical care: determining patient reported outcomes. BMJ Open Qual 2019; 8: e000736.
- 9. Bohmer R, Shand J, Allwood D, et al. Learning systems: managing uncertainty in the new normal of Covid‐19. N Engl J Med Catalyst 2020; 16 July. https://catalyst.nejm.org/doi/full/https://doi.org/10.1056/CAT.20.0318 (viewed June 2021).
- 10. Rosen MA, Diazgranados D, Dietz AS, et al. Teamwork in healthcare: key discoveries enabling safer, high‐quality care. Am Psychol 2018; 73: 433–450.
- 11. Victorian Managed Insurance Authority. Internal audit clinical tool (IACT) kit. Melbourne: VMIA, 2017. https://www.vmia.vic.gov.au/tools‐and‐insights/tools‐guides‐and‐kits/internal‐audit‐risk‐tool‐kit (viewed Apr 2021).
- 12. Duckett S, Cuddihy M, Newnham H. Targeting zero: supporting the Victorian hospital system to eliminate avoidable harm and strengthen quality of care. Report of the Review of Hospital Safety and Quality Assurance in Victoria. Melbourne: State of Victoria, 2016. https://www.dhhs.vic.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/201610/Hospital%20Safety%20and%20Quality%20Assurance%20in%20Victoria.pdf (viewed Apr 2021).
- 13. Hollnagel E, Wears RL, Braithwaite J. From Safety‐1 to Safety‐II: a white paper. 2015. https://www.england.nhs.uk/signuptosafety/wp‐content/uploads/sites/16/2015/10/safety‐1‐safety‐2‐whte‐papr.pdf (accessed Apr 2021).
- 14. Van Gelderen SC, Zegers M, Boeijen W, et al. Evaluation of the organisation and effectiveness of internal audits to govern patient safety in hospitals: a mixed‐methods study. BMJ Open 2017; 7: e015506.
- 15. Australian Government Department of Health. About the Victorian Aged Care Response Centre. https://www.health.gov.au/initiatives‐and‐programs/victorian‐aged‐care‐response‐centre/about‐the‐victorian‐aged‐care‐response‐centre (viewed June 2021).
I thank my many colleagues clinical and non‐clinical from local, national and international units and boards who have contributed to the ideas discussed in this article: in particular, Richard Coates, Daniel Fineberg, Felice Borghmans, Lara Kimmel and Andrew Way of Alfred Health for creating space for, and leading, conversations that matter.
No relevant disclosures.