Abstract
Objective: To assess nonclinical factors delaying hospital discharge of guardianship patients.
Data: Utilization review data over 3 years.
Design: Retrospective cohort study.
Analysis: Mann-Whitney test was used to compare patients' medically unnecessary days (MUD) of hospitalization with additional subcategories of delays-defined as beyond clinicians' control.
Findings: Overall median number of MUD was 19.5; 14 of 48 patients were additionally delayed while awaiting long-term care Medicaid approval (N = 7, 50%), pending insurance (N = 3, 21%), social or transportation difficulties (N = 3, 21%), or preadmission review (N = 1, 7%). The median number of MUD for the 14 delayed patients was 63, a difference of 53 days compared with the routine guardianship cohort (P < .0001) and $5.5M in net revenue opportunity.
Conclusions: Nonclinical discharge delays for guardianship patients are costly and potentially unavoidable. Further exploration into policy change is therefore recommended.