Abstract
An educational intervention designed to change physicians’ use of inpatient services was implemented on two general medical services for a year. The intervention consisted of a brief orientation to cost containment issues, a pamphlet that outlined practical cost containment strategies and listed the charges for commonly ordered tests and services, and access to detailed interim patients’ bills generated during the hospitalization. Two concurrent control services received no intervention. Over 1,600 admissions were evaluated. The geometric mean length of stay was 0.61 days shorter on intervention services compared with control (5.15 vs. 5.76 days, p<0.01). The geometric mean hospital charges were $388 less for intervention patients ($3,199 vs. $3,587, p<0.005). Neither patients’ demographic characteristics nor case mix could explain the reductions. The authors conclude that a simple program utilizing information already in existence in most hospitals can result in a significant and meaningful reduction in length of stay and charges.
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Additional information
Received from the Department of Internal Medicine, 3116 Taubman Center, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0376.
Presented in part at the American Federation for Clinical Research National Meeting, May 1984.
Supported in part by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
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Billi, J.E., Hejna, G.F., Wolf, F.M. et al. The effects of a cost-education program on hospital charges. J Gen Intern Med 2, 306–311 (1987). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02596163
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02596163