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Leveraging social determinants of health to reduce hospital length of stay: A pilot QI project for solid tumor oncology patients during the COVID-19 pandemic

Kamaraju T, Atkinson D, Wright T, Charlosn J, Wetzel T, Campbell G, Cadman J, Williams J, Egede L, Retseck J, Banerjee A, Ehrlich V, Stolley M, Power S
WMJ

PURPOSE: The impact of the social determinants of health (SDOH) on hospitalized cancer patients and hospital length of stay is unknown. At our institution, a hospital-wide SDOH survey that examined patient-specific barriers to various domains of SDOH and facilitated hospital discharge was integrated into the electronic medical record. This study reports the effect of the SDOH survey on length of stay for oncology patients and the outpatient referrals generated to facilitate the discharge. METHODS: We examined length of stay index data on inpatient oncology patients and 2 comparator services (bone marrow transplant, internal medicine). We evaluated the length of stay using a 2-sample t test, and the rate of referrals per discharge using a 2-sample Poisson test. RESULTS: Compared to the baseline length of stay, after the launch of the SDOH survey, there was a significant (8.9%) decrease in the average length of stay for oncology patients (8.14 to 7.41 days, P = 0.004), the LOS decrease for the bone marrow transplant and subset was a nonsignificant trend only (P > 0.1). Average referrals per discharge increased from baseline 1.063 per discharge to 1.159 after implementation (P = 0.004), and the mean values increased by 9%. CONCLUSIONS: The SDOH survey tool assisted in a timely examination of patient-specific barriers to discharge, leveraged care coordination, and facilitated a safe hospital discharge. Such efforts increase the efficiency of health care service delivery in response to public health threats, such as the COVID-19 pandemic.

Kamaraju T, Atkinson D, Wright T, et al. Leveraging social determinants of health to reduce hospital length of stay: a pilot QI project for solid tumor oncology patients during the COVID-19 pandemic. WMJ. 2022;121(3):205-211. PMID: 36301647.

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Publication year
Resource type
Peer Reviewed Research
Outcomes
Utilization
Social Determinant of Health
Economic Security
Food/Hunger
Housing Stability
Social Support/Social Isolation
Transportation
Violence/Safety
Study design
Pre-post without Comparison Group
Keywords