January 8, 2024

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Hospitals dealing with increasingly complex patients, analysis reveals

Trends in Continuous Measures of Complexity, 2002-2017 Graphs illustrate the trend in the mean of continuous measures of complexity over the 15-year study interval. Dark blue points correspond to patient factors at admission, and light blue points correspond to features of the hospitalization. Trend lines were generated using locally estimated scatterplot smoothing. While the absolute changes for any given measure were modest, the overall trend suggests increased complexity over time for all measures of complexity. CCI indicates Charlson Comorbidity Index; ICU, intensive care unit; LOS, length of stay. Credit: JAMA Internal Medicine (2024). DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2023.7410
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Trends in Continuous Measures of Complexity, 2002-2017 Graphs illustrate the trend in the mean of continuous measures of complexity over the 15-year study interval. Dark blue points correspond to patient factors at admission, and light blue points correspond to features of the hospitalization. Trend lines were generated using locally estimated scatterplot smoothing. While the absolute changes for any given measure were modest, the overall trend suggests increased complexity over time for all measures of complexity. CCI indicates Charlson Comorbidity Index; ICU, intensive care unit; LOS, length of stay. Credit: JAMA Internal Medicine (2024). DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2023.7410

Hospitalized patients are more complex than they used to be. That's the finding of a newly published UBC study which set out to measure something researchers have been hearing anecdotally from hospital-based health care workers over the past two decades.

As it turns out, they weren't imagining things.

An analysis of administrative health data covering 3.4 million non-elective hospitalizations in B.C. between 2002 and 2017 revealed that by the end of this 15-year period, were more likely to:

The study period concluded before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, so the effect of the pandemic on these trends has not yet been measured.

"This study isn't just about numbers. It's about real people with increasingly complex health needs," said the study's first author, Dr. Hiten Naik, a research fellow with the UBC Faculty of Medicine's Clinician Investigator Program. "These trends highlight how important it is for health care systems to evolve to meet the changing needs of not only patients but also the who treat and care for them."

The increasing complexity of patients isn't necessarily leading to more serious outcomes for them. In fact, they have become less likely to die while in hospital or be admitted to . This suggests the health system is adapting well to their needs.

Other in this category, such as prolonged hospital stays and unplanned readmissions, increased slightly but not nearly to the degree that patient complexity did.

"The rates of these negative outcomes remained relatively steady in comparison to the patient characteristics of complexity, so you could say the system kept up," noted Dr. Naik. "But this kind of adaptation isn't automatic. The trends suggest that patient complexity will continue to increase."

The researchers stressed the need for governments to be proactive to ensure that complex patients get the kind of care they need—now and into the future.

The study was published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

More information: Hiten Naik et al, Population-Based Trends in Complexity of Hospital Inpatients, JAMA Internal Medicine (2024). DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2023.7410. jamanetwork.com/journals/jamai … /fullarticle/2813852

Journal information: JAMA Internal Medicine

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