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Hospitalist care leads to faster patient discharge

Hospitalist Leadership Connection, September 26, 2007

The Medpage Today reported September 24 on research that found that inpatients under the care of full-time hospitalists were likely to be discharged almost a day sooner than those in the care of non-hospitalists, but there was no significant difference in readmission rates or mortality.


The research was published in the September 24 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine, and found that the mean length of stay for hospitalists' patients was 5.01 days versus 5.87 days for other patients.


Hospitalist care was especially likely to shorten stays for patients with stroke, congestive heart failure, pneumonia, sepsis, urinary tract infections, and asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease-conditions that often require close clinical monitoring and complex discharge planning, the articles says.


Read more about the research at Medpage Today.

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