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Separate and Concentrate: Accounting for Patient Complexity in General Hospitals

Author

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  • Ludwig Kuntz

    (Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences, University of Cologne, 50931 Cologne, Germany)

  • Stefan Scholtes

    (Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1AG, United Kingdom)

  • Sandra Sülz

    (Erasmus School of Health Policy and Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, 3062 PA Rotterdam, Netherlands)

Abstract

Scholars have recently suggested the reorganization of general hospitals into organizationally separate divisions for routine and non-routine services to overcome operational misalignments between the two types of services. We provide empirical evidence for this proposal from a quality perspective, using over 250,000 patient discharge records from 60 German hospitals across 39 high-mortality disease segments, and focusing on in-hospital mortality as outcome. Disentangling the effects of high, absolute, and relative hospital volumes in a disease group, our analysis suggests that routine and complex patients would benefit from a hospital organization with a multi-specialty hub for emergency and non-routine elective services at its core, complemented by organizationally separate disease-focused hospitals-within-hospitals for routine services. We also provide evidence that the hub hospital can further improve service quality for complex patients by adopting a disease-based rather than medical specialty-based departmental routing strategy for newly arriving patients. A counterfactual analysis, based on a simultaneous equations probit model that simultaneously controls for endogeneity of volume, focus, and routing strategy, suggests that the proposed reorganization could have reduced mortality in the sample by 13.43% (95% CI [6.87%; 18.95%]) for routine patients and by 11.67% (95% CI [6.13%; 16.86%]) for the most complex patients.

Suggested Citation

  • Ludwig Kuntz & Stefan Scholtes & Sandra Sülz, 2019. "Separate and Concentrate: Accounting for Patient Complexity in General Hospitals," Management Science, INFORMS, vol. 67(6), pages 2482-2501, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:inm:ormnsc:v:65:y:2019:i:6:p:2482-2501
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    3. Anna Svarts & Luca Urciuoli & Anders Thorell & Mats Engwall, 2020. "Does Focus Improve Performance in Elective Surgery? A Study of Obesity Surgery in Sweden," IJERPH, MDPI, vol. 17(18), pages 1-16, September.
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    5. Diwas Singh KC & Stefan Scholtes & Christian Terwiesch, 2020. "Empirical Research in Healthcare Operations: Past Research, Present Understanding, and Future Opportunities," Manufacturing & Service Operations Management, INFORMS, vol. 22(1), pages 73-83, January.

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