Clinical and Safety Outcomes of Patients Admitted to Different Specialty Wards: The Prospective, Multi-center, Controlled SISIFO Study
Micaela La Regina, Lorenzo Federici, Elisa Romano, Francesco Orlandini, Andrea Fontanella, Antonino Mazzone, Mauro Campanini, Dario Manfellotto, Alessandro Squizzato, Riccardo Tartaglia,Objectives:
Patients’ admission to different specialty wards (the so-called “outliers”) due to a hospital bed shortage may significantly reduce the quality and safety of clinical care. However, data on clinical outcomes are limited, heterogeneous, and mainly retrospective. For this reason, we performed a prospective controlled study, the Survival and Safety Issues for Medical Outliers (SISIFO) study.
Methods:
We conducted the SISIFO study, a prospective, multicenter, controlled study to primarily evaluate clinical and safety outcomes in outliers from October 2018 to March 2020.
Results:
Thirty-seven Italian Internal Medicine Units enrolled 2056 medically ill patients, 988 outliers, and 1068 controls. Overall, the median length of hospital stay was 10 days [interquartile range (IQR) 7-15]. The median stay in the different specialty wards was 2 days (IQR 2-4). The in-hospital mortality of outliers was significantly higher than that of controls (
Conclusions:
Our study suggests a significant increase in in-hospital mortality associated with admission to different specialty wards. Future studies should investigate the specific reasons for this finding.