Study identifies methods for preventing overcrowding in emergency rooms

No single solution exists for alleviating crowding in emergency rooms, but a new study identifies four key strategies that have reduced the problem.
The study concludes that engaged executive leadership can alleviate the problem when combined with a data-driven approach and coordination across the hospital from housekeepers to the CEO. Crowding in emergency rooms has been associated with decreased patient satisfaction and even death.
“Emergency department crowding can be dangerous for patients,” said senior author Benjamin Sun, M.D., a professor of emergency medicine in the OHSU School of Medicine. “We know, for example, that emergency department crowding can lead to delays in pain medications for patients with broken bones, as well as delays in antibiotics for patients with pneumonia. We know the risk of death is higher when the emergency department is more crowded than when it’s less crowded.”
The study identified groups of hospitals categorized as low, high or highest-improving in terms of lengths of stay and boarding times (the length of time an admitted patient must wait for an inpatient bed), as measured through statistics provided by 2,619 U.S. hospitals to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The authors picked a representative sample of four hospitals in each of the three categories of performance, then systematically interviewed a broad range of stakeholders.
The researchers talked to 60 people at the 12 hospitals. Interviewees included nursing staff, emergency department directors, directors of inpatient services, chief medical officers and other executive officers.
The study identified four key strategies:
1) Involvement of executive leadership: The study noted that executive leaders in highperforming hospitals identified hospital crowding as a top priority complete with clear goals and resources to achieve those goals.
“In contrast, low performing hospital executive leadership did not prioritize crowding initiatives, despite acknowledging the causes,” the authors wrote. “Emergency department leadership often felt isolated in their struggle with significant boarding and lengths of stay.”
2) Hospital-wide coordinated strategies: High-performing hospitals performed as a cohesive system across departments to alleviate crowding, in contrast to low-performing hospitals that operated in silos. For example, one executive at a high-performing hospital developed strategies for improving bed turnaround times on inpatient rooms.
“Instead of waiting for the room to go from dirty to clean and then to book transportation for a patient to come, we started doing things in parallel so that we would cut down on waiting time,” the executive said in the report.
3) Data-driven management: High-performing hospitals gathered and used data to adjust operations in real time, provided immediate feedback to key personnel, and predicted patterns of flow in the emergency department and hospital, matching resources to meet expected demand.
“In contrast, at low-performing hospitals, data were most often available only retrospectively, and, if the data were used, they were discussed by executive leadership at monthly or quarterly meetings,” the authors wrote.
4) Performance accountability: High-performing hospitals held staff accountable and problems were addressed immediately to reduce crowding.
Sun described a typical scenario in one high-performing hospital: “If boarding in the ED exceeded the acceptable limit, the chief medical officer would physically get out of the office, go onto the ward floors, and start reviewing charts and asking, ‘What can we do to fix the problem?’” he said.
OHSU School of Medicine
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