Hospital Performance Indicators and Their Associated Factors in Acute Child Poisoning at a Single Poison Center, Central Saudi Arabia
- PMID: 26717371
- PMCID: PMC5291612
- DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000002339
Hospital Performance Indicators and Their Associated Factors in Acute Child Poisoning at a Single Poison Center, Central Saudi Arabia
Abstract
Admission rate and length of stay (LOS) are two hospital performance indicators that affect the quality of care, patients' satisfaction, bed turnover, and health cost expenditures. The aim of the study was to identify factors associated with higher admission rates and extended average LOS among acutely poisoned children at a single poison center, central Saudi Arabia.This is a cross-sectional, poison and medical chart review between 2009 and 2011. Exposures were child characteristics, that is, gender, age, body mass index (BMI), health history, and Canadian 5-level triage scale. Poison incident characteristics were, that is, type, exposure route, amount, form, home remedy, and arrival time to center. Admission status and LOS were obtained from records. Chronic poisoning, plant allergies, and venomous bites were excluded. Bivariate and regression analyses were applied. Significance at P < 0.05.Of the 315 eligible cases, (72%) were toddlers with equal gender distribution, (58%) had normal BMI, and (77%) were previously healthy. Poison substances were pharmaceutical drugs (63%) versus chemical products (37%). Main exposure route was oral (98%). Home remedy was observed in (21.9%), which were fluids, solutes, and/or gag-induced vomiting. Almost (52%) arrived to center >1 h. Triage levels: non-urgent cases (58%), less urgent (11%), urgent (18%), emergency (12%), resuscitative (1%). Admission rate was (20.6%) whereas av. LOS was 13 ± 22 h. After adjusting and controlling for confounders, older children (adj.OR = 1.19) and more critical triage levels (adj.OR = 1.35) were significantly associated with higher admission rates compared to younger children and less critical triage levels (adj.P = 0.006) and (adj.P = 0.042) respectively. Home remedy prior arrival was significantly associated with higher av. LOS (Beta = 9.48, t = 2.99), compared to those who directly visited the center, adj.P = 0.003.Hospital administrators are cautioned that acutely poisoned children who received home remedies prior arrival are more likely to endure an extended LOS. This non-conventional practice is not recommended.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors have no funding and conflicts of interest to disclose.
References
-
- Raeisi AR, Yarmohammadian MH, MohammadiBakhsh R, et al. The performance indicators based on Iranian balanced scorecard model in Al-Zahra hospital of Isfahan University of Medical Science. Health Inf Manage 2013; 10:601–610.
-
- Rapoport J, Teres D, Zhao Y, et al. Length of stay data as a guide to hospital economic performance for ICU patients. Med Care 2003; 41:386–397. - PubMed
-
- Rahimi H, Khammar-nia M, Kavosi Z, et al. Indicators of hospital performance evaluation: a systematic review. Int J Hosp Res 2014; 3:199–208.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
