Re-organization of hospital units of department of radiation oncology at the institute of oncology Ljubljana

<p><strong>Background:</strong> In 2004, activities related to the reorganization of the hospital units of the Department of Radiation Oncology at the Institute of Oncology Ljubljana were initiated. The need for reorganization arose from the dissipation of different types of manage...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brigita Skela-Savič, Primož Strojan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Slovenian Medical Association 2006-06-01
Series:Zdravniški Vestnik
Subjects:
Online Access:http://vestnik.szd.si/index.php/ZdravVest/article/view/2014
id doaj-8e22b6ab72f9450cab7c770deff9d83d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8e22b6ab72f9450cab7c770deff9d83d2020-11-24T22:51:23ZengSlovenian Medical AssociationZdravniški Vestnik1318-03471581-02242006-06-01756-71504Re-organization of hospital units of department of radiation oncology at the institute of oncology LjubljanaBrigita Skela-SavičPrimož Strojan<p><strong>Background:</strong> In 2004, activities related to the reorganization of the hospital units of the Department of Radiation Oncology at the Institute of Oncology Ljubljana were initiated. The need for reorganization arose from the dissipation of different types of management currently followed in all four hospital units of the Department. The aim of our article is to present an approach which we used when planning above mentioned reorganization.</p><p><strong>Methods:</strong> In December 2004 and January 2005, two separate applicative studies were performed, i.e. the cross-sectional studies »Hostel« and »Palliative Care«. The studies were being carried out in three (altogether 124 beds) of the four hospital units of the Department of Radiation Oncology with a total bed capacity of 138. Considering the type and complexity of the nursing care, the patients were categorized by the preliminarily determined criteria into three groups: Group 1 – patients hospitalized in a standard hospital unit, Group 2 – patients hospitalized in the »Hostel«, and Group 3 – patients hospitalized in the unit for palliative care. The control of the criteria and of their fulfillment was made daily by a therapist and registered nurse during the morning rounds.</p><p><strong>Results:</strong> Average number of patients eligible for hostel care was 16.5, which represented 16.7 % of the patients hospitalized daily at that time. Average number of patients in the »palliative care« category was 36.8, or 39.6 % of the hospitalized patients. During the performance of »Palliative Care« cross-sectional study, it was realized that 61.7 % of hospitalized patients were partly or completely dependent upon the nursing staff in performing routine personal activities. The higher dependence on nursing staff was confirmed by the statistically significant higher percentage of patients in the categories II-IV (more complex nursing care) than it was established for the other patients at the Institute of Oncology (87.8 % vs. 63.7 %, chi-squared test, P &lt; 0.0001).</p><p><strong>Conclusions:</strong> With the proposed categorization of patients, the number of hospital beds at the Department of Radiation Oncology could be reduced by 39.1 % (54/138): a large percentage of the patients hospitalized at the Department (on average 36.8 %) should be referred to the unit for »palliative care«, whereas lower percentage (16.5 %) to the »hostel«. Furthermore, it was also established that palliative care in oncology meets the criteria of the »acute hospital management« and should therefore be included in the system of Diagnosis-Related Groups.</p>http://vestnik.szd.si/index.php/ZdravVest/article/view/2014reorganizationradiotherapypalliative carehostelnursing care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brigita Skela-Savič
Primož Strojan
spellingShingle Brigita Skela-Savič
Primož Strojan
Re-organization of hospital units of department of radiation oncology at the institute of oncology Ljubljana
Zdravniški Vestnik
reorganization
radiotherapy
palliative care
hostel
nursing care
author_facet Brigita Skela-Savič
Primož Strojan
author_sort Brigita Skela-Savič
title Re-organization of hospital units of department of radiation oncology at the institute of oncology Ljubljana
title_short Re-organization of hospital units of department of radiation oncology at the institute of oncology Ljubljana
title_full Re-organization of hospital units of department of radiation oncology at the institute of oncology Ljubljana
title_fullStr Re-organization of hospital units of department of radiation oncology at the institute of oncology Ljubljana
title_full_unstemmed Re-organization of hospital units of department of radiation oncology at the institute of oncology Ljubljana
title_sort re-organization of hospital units of department of radiation oncology at the institute of oncology ljubljana
publisher Slovenian Medical Association
series Zdravniški Vestnik
issn 1318-0347
1581-0224
publishDate 2006-06-01
description <p><strong>Background:</strong> In 2004, activities related to the reorganization of the hospital units of the Department of Radiation Oncology at the Institute of Oncology Ljubljana were initiated. The need for reorganization arose from the dissipation of different types of management currently followed in all four hospital units of the Department. The aim of our article is to present an approach which we used when planning above mentioned reorganization.</p><p><strong>Methods:</strong> In December 2004 and January 2005, two separate applicative studies were performed, i.e. the cross-sectional studies »Hostel« and »Palliative Care«. The studies were being carried out in three (altogether 124 beds) of the four hospital units of the Department of Radiation Oncology with a total bed capacity of 138. Considering the type and complexity of the nursing care, the patients were categorized by the preliminarily determined criteria into three groups: Group 1 – patients hospitalized in a standard hospital unit, Group 2 – patients hospitalized in the »Hostel«, and Group 3 – patients hospitalized in the unit for palliative care. The control of the criteria and of their fulfillment was made daily by a therapist and registered nurse during the morning rounds.</p><p><strong>Results:</strong> Average number of patients eligible for hostel care was 16.5, which represented 16.7 % of the patients hospitalized daily at that time. Average number of patients in the »palliative care« category was 36.8, or 39.6 % of the hospitalized patients. During the performance of »Palliative Care« cross-sectional study, it was realized that 61.7 % of hospitalized patients were partly or completely dependent upon the nursing staff in performing routine personal activities. The higher dependence on nursing staff was confirmed by the statistically significant higher percentage of patients in the categories II-IV (more complex nursing care) than it was established for the other patients at the Institute of Oncology (87.8 % vs. 63.7 %, chi-squared test, P &lt; 0.0001).</p><p><strong>Conclusions:</strong> With the proposed categorization of patients, the number of hospital beds at the Department of Radiation Oncology could be reduced by 39.1 % (54/138): a large percentage of the patients hospitalized at the Department (on average 36.8 %) should be referred to the unit for »palliative care«, whereas lower percentage (16.5 %) to the »hostel«. Furthermore, it was also established that palliative care in oncology meets the criteria of the »acute hospital management« and should therefore be included in the system of Diagnosis-Related Groups.</p>
topic reorganization
radiotherapy
palliative care
hostel
nursing care
url http://vestnik.szd.si/index.php/ZdravVest/article/view/2014
work_keys_str_mv AT brigitaskelasavic reorganizationofhospitalunitsofdepartmentofradiationoncologyattheinstituteofoncologyljubljana
AT primozstrojan reorganizationofhospitalunitsofdepartmentofradiationoncologyattheinstituteofoncologyljubljana
_version_ 1725669946411712512