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Med/Surg Bed Projections. Delaware Health Resources Board April 25, 2013. Med/Surg Bed Projections: Overview. Review past med/surg bed projections in Delaware Look at methodological details specific to Delaware that impact med/surg bed projections Walk through calculation steps
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Med/Surg Bed Projections Delaware Health Resources Board April 25, 2013
Med/Surg Bed Projections: Overview • Review past med/surg bed projections in Delaware • Look at methodological details specific to Delaware that impact med/surg bed projections • Walk through calculation steps • Explore if/how to revise med/surg bed projection procedures
Past Med/Surg Bed Projections • Last set of med/surg bed projections was calculated in Nov. 2008 • This set of med/surg projections was for the 2005-2010 period • These projections were presented along with 2005-2010 LTC projections • At that time, HRB members requested updated LTC projections and stated that LTC projections be updated annually • Although the current HRMP states that med/surg projections will also be updated annually, the most recent set of projections remained those for the 2005-2010 period
Past Med/Surg Bed Projections • 2005-2010 (calculated in 2008) • 2006-2011 • 2007-2012 • 2008-2013 • 2009-2014 • 2010-2015 (available today) • 2011-2016 (available today)
Med/Surg Bed Projections: 2005-2010 vs. 2010-2015 vs.2011-2016
Licensed Bed Supply • Delaware Office of Health Facilities Licensing and Certification • Licensed bed counts represent ALL* licensed beds for the facility (not broken down by type) • Licensed bed counts do NOT include labor/delivery/recovery beds or bassinets/isolettes (such as NICU or nursery) • To obtain bed tallies by type (i.e., “medical/surgical beds”), each hospital will need to be contacted individually
Med/Surg Bed Projections: The Basics to Get Us Started • As with all surveillance data, there is a lag in data availability that determines the most up-to-date time period for which you can calculate projections • Delaware LTC data: • Most recently-available data (i.e., “base year”) = 2011 • Most up-to-date time period for projections = 2012-2017 • Delaware med/surg data: • Most recently-available data (i.e., “base year”) = 2010 • Most up-to-date time period for projections = 2011-2016
Med/Surg Bed Projections: The Basics to Get Us Started • Calculated at the hospital-level • Each hospital has its own annual projection (*with the exception of A.I. DuPont) • Additionally, one county-level projection is produced annually for NCC • County-level projections are not produced for Kent or Sussex • A.I. DuPont is excluded from all analyses • There are no hospital-level projections for A.I. • Also, data from A.I. are not included in the county-level NCC projection
Med/Surg Bed Projections: The Basics to Get Us Started • Med/surg projections are calculated from patient day data for two age groups only: • 15-64 year olds • 65+ year olds • Pediatric med/surg data (<15 year olds) are excluded from each hospital’s calculations
Med/Surg Calculation steps Examples: (1) Beebe Medical Center, 2011-2016 (2) Wilmington Hospital, 2011-2016
Med/Surg Calculation Steps: A Summary Step 1: Calculate Average Daily Census (ADC) for Base Year Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) Step 3: Calculate Projected Bed Need
Step 1: Calculate Average Daily Census (ADC) for Base Year • Base year = one year prior to the start of the projection period you’re calculating • Example: if you’re calculating projections for 2011-2016, your base year is 2010 • Note: you also need data for one year prior to the base year (i.e., “prior year data”). If you’re calculating projections for 2011-2016, your prior year is 2009 • When projections are calculated annually and on-time, the base year will typically represent the most recently-available year of data
Step 1:Calculate Average Daily Census (ADC) for Base Year Eliminate Pediatric Cases & Create the 15-64 Age Category
Step 1:Calculate Average Daily Census (ADC) for Base Year Eliminate Pediatric Cases & Create the 15-64 Age Category
Med/Surg Calculation Steps: A Summary Step 1: Calculate Average Daily Census (ADC) for Base Year Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) Step 3: Calculate Projected Bed Need
Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) • Essentially, Step 2 is comprised of three sub-steps: • Calculate population changes… • Use population data to calculate Population Change Factor (PCF)… • Use PCF to calculate Projected ADC
Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) • Calculate Projected Population Changes • Use Delaware Population Consortium Data (available online) • Calculate projected population change by dividing the population for the last year of the projected time period by the population for the first year of the projected time period
Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) • Calculate Projected Population Changes • Hospital-specific med/surg projections are calculated using population statistics from the following geographic areas: • Christiana Hospital: New Castle County • St. Francis Hospital: New Castle County • Wilmington Hospital: New Castle County • Kent General Hospital: Kent County • Milford Memorial Hospital: Kent and Sussex Counties* • Beebe Medical Center: Sussex County • Nanticoke Hospital: Sussex County
Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) • Calculate Projected Population Changes
Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) • Calculate Projected Population Changes
Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) • Calculate Population Change Factor (PCF)
Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) • Calculate Population Change Factor (PCF)
Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) • Calculate Population Change Factor (PCF) • Important Note: If the base year ADC (calculated in Step 1) is < 95% of the prior year ADC (also calculated in Step 1), a PCF of 1.0 will be used to calculate the hospital’s projected ADC… (Unless the PCF as calculated is < 1.0, in which case the lesser figure will be used).
Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) • Calculate Population Change Factor (PCF) • Is the base year ADC > or < 95% of the prior year ADC? Let’s see... Base year = 2010 Prior year = 2009
Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) • Use PCF to Calculate Projected ADC
Med/Surg Calculation Steps: A Summary Step 1: Calculate Average Daily Census (ADC) for Base Year Step 2: Calculate Projected Average Daily Census (ADC) Step 3: Calculate Projected Bed Need
Step 3: Calculate Projected Bed Need • New Castle County: Occupancy Factor = 0.850 • Kent and Sussex Counties: Occupancy Factor = 0.875 • By setting the ideal occupancy rate for New Castle County hospitals to 85%, the med/surg bed need projections for NCC and the three NCC hospitals will be slightly more conservative • Allow for more surge capacity in NCC hospitals?
Med/Surg Bed Projections: 2005-2010 vs. 2010-2015 vs.2011-2016
Point for Consideration: The Influence of Base Year ADC on Projections • What are the main driving forces of year-to-year fluctuations in bed need projections? • Population Change • Base Year ADC • But, because population projections for the 15-64 and 65+ age categories typically only INCREASE over time, population changes should always work to increase med/surg bed need
Point for Consideration: The Influence of Base Year ADC on Projections • What are the main driving forces of year-to-year fluctuations in bed need projections? • Population Change • Base Year ADC • So, what causes the “up and down” med/surg bed need projections for some hospitals? • Base Year ADC is the strongest factor in determining if a hospital’s med/surg bed needs will increase or decrease across projection periods.
Point for Consideration: The Influence of Base Year ADC on Projections Med/Surg ADC by Hospital, 2003-2010
Point for Consideration: The Influence of Base Year ADC on Projections Med/Surg ADC by Hospital, 2003-2010
Point for Consideration: Excluding A.I. DuPont from NCC Bed Projections
Point for Consideration: Excluding A.I. DuPont from NCC Bed Projections
Point for Consideration: Excluding A.I. DuPont from NCC Bed Projections
Med/Surg Bed Projections: Points for Consideration • Med/surg projections are calculated from patient day data for two age groups only: • 15-64 year olds • 65+ year olds • Pediatric med/surg data (<15 year olds) are excluded from each hospital’s calculations • However, as the next slide shows, most hospitals are treating a large number of pediatric med/surg cases
Point for Consideration: Excluding Med/Surg Pediatric Patient Days
Point for Consideration: Excluding Med/Surg Pediatric Patient Days • Unlike the previous issue of excluding A.I. DuPont from med/surg projections, the decision to exclude pediatric med/surg patient days not only impacts New Castle County, but all individual hospitals. • This methodological step will disproportionately affect hospitals with relatively large pediatric med/surg loads • The larger a hospital’s pediatric med/surg load, the more artificially low its bed need projections will be by the exclusion of pediatric med/surg patient day data
Point for Consideration: Summarized • The strong influence of base year ADC on resulting bed projections • Statistical methods to smooth out year-to-year variability? • Exclusion of A.I. DuPont from NCC med/surg patient day totals • Even among the 15-64 age group • Exclusion of pediatric med/surg data from all hospitals • Results in artificially low ADCs and bed projections