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Published in: Intensive Care Medicine 12/2003

01-12-2003 | Brief Report

The relationship between labour cost per patient and the size of intensive care units: a multicentre prospective study

Authors: Guido Bertolini, Carlotta Rossi, Luca Brazzi, Danilo Radrizzani, Giancarlo Rossi, Enrico Arrighi, Bruno Simini

Published in: Intensive Care Medicine | Issue 12/2003

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Abstract

Objective

We examined the relationship between major ICU characteristics and labour cost per patient.

Design

Four-week prospective data collection, in which the hours spent by each physician and nurse on both in-ICU and extra-ICU activities were collected.

Setting

Eighty Italian adult ICUs.

Measurements and results

The cost of the time actually spent by ICU staff on ICU patients (labour cost) was computed for each participating unit, by applying to the average annual salaries the proportions of in-ICU activity working time for physicians and nurses. Multiple regression analysis was used to identify ICU characteristics that predict labour costs per patient. Labour cost per patient was positively correlated with ICU mortality and patients average length of stay (slopes =0.67, p =0.048 and 0.09, p <0.0001, respectively). Labour cost per patient decreases almost linearly as the number of beds increases up to about eight, and it remains nearly constant above about twelve beds. The number of patients admitted per physician (not per nurse) increases with the number of beds (Spearman correlation coefficient =0.567, p <0.0001).

Conclusions

Our findings suggest that ICUs with less than about 12 beds are not cost-effective.
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Metadata
Title
The relationship between labour cost per patient and the size of intensive care units: a multicentre prospective study
Authors
Guido Bertolini
Carlotta Rossi
Luca Brazzi
Danilo Radrizzani
Giancarlo Rossi
Enrico Arrighi
Bruno Simini
Publication date
01-12-2003
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Intensive Care Medicine / Issue 12/2003
Print ISSN: 0342-4642
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1238
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-003-2019-1

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