Ensuring high-quality alternatives while ending pediatric inpatient care as we know it
K. M. McConnochie, K. J. Roghmann, H. J. Kitzman, G. S. Liptak and J. T. McBride
Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester School of Medicine, New York, USA.
Child advocates recognize pediatric hospitalization as an issue of great
concern because of the serious morbidity it reflects and the adverse
psychosocial effects of inpatient experience on children and families.
Accounting for almost 50% of child health care costs, estimated at $49.8
billion in the United States in 1987, pediatric hospitalization also
represents a substantial financial burden. Studies of the variation in
childhood hospitalization rates among geographic areas, however, suggest a
large portion of these hospitalizations are avoidable. In individual level
analysis, admitting pediatricians judged 28% of acute, general pediatric
hospitalizations to be potentially avoidable had specified alternative
services been available. Furthermore, evidence supports the safety of care
in alternative settings for selected acute illness episodes. Hospitals
share incentives for reducing inpatient services as they join managed care
organizations that capitate hospital costs. At a time when health care cost
reduction has become a dominant theme in industry and politics, concern
seems warranted that cost considerations might prevail over quality
considerations in shaping change. The concern of child advocates is
heightened by the fact that costs are measured as dollars while measures of
quality remain comparatively vague.
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