Early Discharge After Nonoperative Management of Intussusception is Both Safe and Cost-Effective

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Seyed A. Arshad, Nutan B. Hebballi, Brittany N. Hegde, Elenir B.C. Avritscher, Susan D. John, Robert M. Lapus, KuoJen Tsao, Akemi L. Kawaguchi Published:

Author / Expert

Seyed A. Arshad, Nutan B. Hebballi, Brittany N. Hegde, Elenir B.C. Avritscher, Susan D. John, Robert M. Lapus, KuoJen Tsao, Akemi L. Kawaguchi

Topic overview

Abstract

Background/Purpose

We implemented a quality improvement (QI) initiative to safely reduce post-reduction monitoring for pediatric patients with ileocolic intussusception. We hypothesized that there would be decreased length of stay (LOS) and hospital costs, with no change in intussusception recurrence rates.

Methods

A retrospective cohort study was conducted of pediatric ileocolic intussusception patients who underwent successful enema reduction at a tertiary-care pediatric hospital from January 2015 through June 2020. In September 2017, an intussusception management protocol was implemented, which allowed discharge within four hours of reduction. Pre- and post-QI outcomes were compared for index encounters and any additional encounter beginning within 24 hours of discharge. An economic evaluation was performed with hospital costs inflation-adjusted to 2020 United States Dollars ($). Cost differences between groups were assessed using multivariable regression, adjusting for Medicaid and transfer status, P

Keywords

Hashtags

5 Views
0 Comments

Comments

Loading comments...