Cost offset from a psychiatric consultation-liaison intervention with elderly hip fracture patients

James J. Strain, John S. Lyons, Jeffrey S. Hammer, Marianne Fahs, Allen Lebovits, Patricia L. Paddison, Stephen Snyder, Elton Strauss, Robert Burton, Gordon Nuber, Thomas Abernathy, Henry Sacks, Joann Nordlie, Charles Sacks

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

204 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: The authors hypothesized that psychiatric liaison screening of elderly patients with hip fractures would shorten the average length of hospital stay and increase the proportion of patients who returned home after discharge. Method: The study was performed at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York and Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. The subjects were 452 patients 65 years or older who were consecutively admitted for surgical repair of fractured hips. During a baseline year the patients received traditional referral for psychiatric consultation. During the experimental year all the patients at Mount Sinai and the patients on one Northwestern unit were screened for psychiatric consultation. Results: The patients who received psychiatric liaison screening had a higher consultation rate than those who received traditional consultation. The rates of DSM-III disorders in the experimental year were 56% at Mount Sinai and 60% at Northwestern. The mean length of stay was reduced from 20.7 to 18.5 days at Mount Sinai and from 15.5 to 13.8 days at Northwestern, resulting in reductions in hospital costs ($6471 day) of $166,926 and $97,361, respectively. Fees generated from Medicare service delivery could have paid for the $20,000 psychiatric intervention cost at each site. There was no difference, however, between the two years in the discharge placement of patients. Conclusions: Admission psychiatric liaison screening of elderly patients with hip fractures results in early detection of psychiatric morbidity, better psychiatric care, earlier discharge, and substantial cost savings to the hospital.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1044-1049
Number of pages6
JournalAmerican Journal of Psychiatry
Volume148
Issue number8
StatePublished - 1991

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Psychiatry and Mental health

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