Is Resident-Driven Inpatient Care More Expensive? Challenging a Long-Held Assumption.

Acad Med

C. Hur is director, Healthcare Innovations Research and Evaluation, and professor of medicine, Columbia University, New York, New York.

Published: August 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates the financial impact of graduate medical education (GME), particularly comparing costs and clinical outcomes between a resident-driven service (RS) and a nonresident-covered service (NRS) in a teaching hospital.
  • Results showed that patient care costs were slightly lower and the length of stay (LOS) was shorter for the RS, challenging the belief that residents increase patient care costs without affecting patient outcomes like mortality or readmission rates.
  • These findings suggest that GME may not be as costly as previously assumed, though the results may not apply to outpatient settings or other medical specialties.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The financial impact of graduate medical education (GME) on teaching hospitals remains poorly understood, while calls for increased federal support continue alongside legislative threats to reduce funding. Despite studies suggesting that residents are more "economical" than alternative providers, GME is widely believed to be an expensive investment. Assumptions that residents increase the cost of patient care have persisted in the absence of convincing evidence to the contrary. Thus, the authors sought to examine resident influence on patient care costs by comparing costs between a resident-driven service (RS) and a nonresident-covered service (NRS), with attention to clinical outcomes and how potential cost differences relate to the utilization of resources, length of stay (LOS), and other factors.

Method: This prospective study compared costs and clinical outcomes of internal medicine patients admitted to an RS versus an NRS at Massachusetts General Hospital (July 1, 2016-June 30, 2017). Total variable direct costs of inpatient admission was the primary outcome measure. LOS; 30-day readmission rate; utilization related to diagnostic radiology, pharmaceuticals, and clinical labs; and other outcome measures were also compared. Linear regression models quantified the relationship between log-transformed variable direct costs and service.

Results: Baseline characteristics of 5,448 patients on the 2 services (3,250 on an RS and 2,198 on an NRS) were similar. On an RS, patient care costs were slightly less and LOS was slightly shorter than on an NRS, with no significant differences in hospital mortality or 30-day readmission rate detected. Resource utilization was comparable between the services.

Conclusions: These findings undermine long-held assumptions that residents increase the cost of patient care. Though not generalizable to ambulatory settings or other specialties, this study can help inform hospital decision making around sponsorship of GME programs, especially if federal funding for GME remains capped or is subject to additional reductions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000003939DOI Listing

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