Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dora.health.qld.gov.au/qldresearchjspui/handle/1/4022
Title: Patient and economic impact of implementing a paediatric sepsis pathway in emergency departments in Queensland, Australia
Authors: McPhail, S.
Harley, Amanda 
Schlapbach, L. J.
Venkatesh, B.
Raman, S.
Irwin, Adam 
Blythe, R.
Lister, P.
Seaton, R.
Issue Date: 2022
Source: 12, (1), 2022, p. 10113
Pages: 10113
Journal: Scientific reports
Abstract: We examined systems-level costs before and after the implementation of an emergency department paediatric sepsis screening, recognition and treatment pathway. Aggregated hospital admissions for all children aged < 18y with a diagnosis code of sepsis upon admission in Queensland, Australia were compared for 16 participating and 32 non-participating hospitals before and after pathway implementation. Monte Carlo simulation was used to generate uncertainty intervals. Policy impacts were estimated using difference-in-difference analysis comparing observed and expected results. We compared 1055 patient episodes before (77.6% in-pathway) and 1504 after (80.5% in-pathway) implementation. Reductions were likely for non-intensive length of stay (- 20.8 h [- 36.1, - 8.0]) but not intensive care (-9.4 h [- 24.4, 5.0]). Non-pathway utilisation was likely unchanged for interhospital transfers (+ 3.2% [- 5.0%, 11.4%]), non-intensive (- 4.5 h [- 19.0, 9.8]) and intensive (+ 7.7 h, [- 20.9, 37.7]) care length of stay. After difference-in-difference adjustment, estimated savings were 596 [277, 942] non-intensive and 172 [148, 222] intensive care days. The program was cost-saving in 63.4% of simulations, with a mean value of $97,019 [- $857,273, $1,654,925] over 24 months. A paediatric sepsis pathway in Queensland emergency departments was associated with potential reductions in hospital utilisation and costs.L6382566492022-06-23
2022-06-27
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-14226-6
Resources: https://www.embase.com/search/results?subaction=viewrecord&id=L638256649&from=exporthttp://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-14226-6 |
Keywords: hospitalization;Australiachild;hospital emergency service;human;length of stay;Queensland;sepsis
Type: Article
Appears in Sites:Children's Health Queensland Publications

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