Kao-Chang Lin

Kao-Chang Lin

Department of Holistic Care Unit, Chi-Mei Medical Center, Tainan, Taiwan



Biography

Kao-Chang Lin, as a qualified neurologist in Taiwan and leading holistic care unit in Chi-Mei medical center since 2012, also a professor and teaching in Southern Taiwan University of Technology and Science in Tainan. The Ministry of Health and Welfare promoted integrating care model at wards (Hospitalist-HOS) from 2014, and Dr Lin was the first one to establish this HOS at ED in Taiwan.

Abstract

Background: The hospitalist model (HOS) setting at wards can improve quality of patient care and shorten length of stay, however, their efficacy at emergency department (ED) is still lacking in Taiwan.

Objective: To realize if HOS is working at ED in a designed academic care program.

Design/Setting: Before-and-after intervention of HOS in a 1200-bed tertiary medical center in Taiwan.

Measurement: A three-shift duty with 8 internal subspecialists was adapted for their working schedule in 3:1:1 physicians round. From 2012~2016, 4 years data was collected retrospectively such as length of stay, over-waiting (>48 hours) period, mortality, 6- and 24-hour deterioration after hospitalization, and satisfaction questionnaire were analyzed before and after HOS intervention was compared.

Results: There was no significant difference in patient number, age, and sex before and after HOS program at ED. In total, 4 years data analyzed (520,409 ED visitors, 111,949 hospitalized) was shown that decline of waiting time, over-waiting (>48 hours), mortality rate, post-hospitalized 6- and 24 hours transferring to intensive care unit were statistically significant (ANOVA, p≦0.05 individually). In average 55-60 patients per month discharged from holistic care unit without admission. Satisfactory questionnaire for pre-hospitalized care in disease explanation, service attitudes, symptom relief and overall impression about healthcare reached 90% in two times survey (427 and 459 sample sizes).

Conclusions: HOS at ED can lessen over-crowded conditions, shorten pre-hospitalized length, decline mortality, and improve quality of care and patient satisfaction. Although data comes from a single medical center, it still shows good efficiency and outcome since HOS implemented at emergency.