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The cost of nurse-sensitive adverse events.
J Nurs Adm. 2008 May; 38(5):230-6.JN

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

The aim of this study was to describe the methodology for nursing leaders to determine the cost of adverse events and effective levels of nurse staffing.

BACKGROUND

The growing transparency of quality and cost outcomes motivates healthcare leaders to optimize the effectiveness of nurse staffing. Most hospitals have robust cost accounting systems that provide actual patient-level direct costs. These systems allow an analysis of the cost consumed by patients during a hospital stay. By knowing the cost of complications, leaders have the ability to justify the cost of improved staffing when quality evidence shows that higher nurse staffing improves quality.

METHODS

An analysis was performed on financial and clinical data from hospital databases of 3,200 inpatients. The purpose was to establish a methodology to determine actual cost per case. Three diagnosis-related groups were the focus of the analysis. Five adverse events were analyzed along with the costs.

RESULTS

A regression analysis reported that the actual direct cost of an adverse event was dollars 1,029 per case in the congestive heart failure cases and dollars 903 in the surgical cases. There was a significant increase in the cost per case in medical patients with urinary tract infection and pressure ulcers and in surgical patients with urinary tract infection and pneumonia. The odds of pneumonia occurring in surgical patients decreased with additional registered nurse hours per patient day.

CONCLUSION

Hospital cost accounting systems are useful in determining the cost of adverse events and can aid in decision making about nurse staffing. Adverse events add costs to patient care and should be measured at the unit level to adjust staffing to reduce adverse events and avoid costs.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Nursing Office, Porter Adventist Hospital, Denver, Colorado 80210, USA. sharonpappas@centura.org

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18469616

Citation

Pappas, Sharon Holcombe. "The Cost of Nurse-sensitive Adverse Events." The Journal of Nursing Administration, vol. 38, no. 5, 2008, pp. 230-6.
Pappas SH. The cost of nurse-sensitive adverse events. J Nurs Adm. 2008;38(5):230-6.
Pappas, S. H. (2008). The cost of nurse-sensitive adverse events. The Journal of Nursing Administration, 38(5), 230-6. https://doi.org/10.1097/01.NNA.0000312770.19481.ce
Pappas SH. The Cost of Nurse-sensitive Adverse Events. J Nurs Adm. 2008;38(5):230-6. PubMed PMID: 18469616.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - The cost of nurse-sensitive adverse events. A1 - Pappas,Sharon Holcombe, PY - 2008/5/13/pubmed PY - 2008/7/2/medline PY - 2008/5/13/entrez SP - 230 EP - 6 JF - The Journal of nursing administration JO - J Nurs Adm VL - 38 IS - 5 N2 - OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to describe the methodology for nursing leaders to determine the cost of adverse events and effective levels of nurse staffing. BACKGROUND: The growing transparency of quality and cost outcomes motivates healthcare leaders to optimize the effectiveness of nurse staffing. Most hospitals have robust cost accounting systems that provide actual patient-level direct costs. These systems allow an analysis of the cost consumed by patients during a hospital stay. By knowing the cost of complications, leaders have the ability to justify the cost of improved staffing when quality evidence shows that higher nurse staffing improves quality. METHODS: An analysis was performed on financial and clinical data from hospital databases of 3,200 inpatients. The purpose was to establish a methodology to determine actual cost per case. Three diagnosis-related groups were the focus of the analysis. Five adverse events were analyzed along with the costs. RESULTS: A regression analysis reported that the actual direct cost of an adverse event was dollars 1,029 per case in the congestive heart failure cases and dollars 903 in the surgical cases. There was a significant increase in the cost per case in medical patients with urinary tract infection and pressure ulcers and in surgical patients with urinary tract infection and pneumonia. The odds of pneumonia occurring in surgical patients decreased with additional registered nurse hours per patient day. CONCLUSION: Hospital cost accounting systems are useful in determining the cost of adverse events and can aid in decision making about nurse staffing. Adverse events add costs to patient care and should be measured at the unit level to adjust staffing to reduce adverse events and avoid costs. SN - 0002-0443 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/18469616/The_cost_of_nurse_sensitive_adverse_events_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -