Original Article
Pounds of Cure: Chart Weight as a Measure of Service Intensity
Abstract
Abstract:Intensity of hospital services is often estimated by length of stay (LOS). Increasing demands for documentation in the medical record suggested to us an alternate method: weighing the chart. In a retrospective study, we compared LOS and chart weight as predictors of actual hospital costs at a community teaching hospital. We reviewed a sample of 123 patients randomly chosen from the medical service and stratified by phase of the academic year. Both least-squares regression and a multiple sampling/validating technique were used to derive mean cost per ounce of chart and per day of stay. Costs estimated from weight were within 7% and from LOS within 14% of measured actual costs among patients not used to derive the formulae. We conclude that the intensity of paper documentation closely reflects actual costs; the same may be true of bytes or keystrokes for electronic records.This content is limited to qualifying members.
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