Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Hospital capacity constraints and rising healthcare costs necessitate innovative models for delivering acute care. While various hospital-substitution models exist, challenges in scalability and long-term viability persist. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the feasibility and safety of a novel, high-acuity Next Day Clinic (NDC) as an alternative to hospitalization for select acutely ill emergency department (ED) patients. DESIGN SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Retrospective matched cohort study of patients referred to the NDC between July 1, 2023-July 31, 2024, matched to patients seen in the ED during the year prior to NDC launch, within a large academic safety-net hospital. INTERVENTION: High-acuity outpatient therapy for one or more consecutive days in the NDC, consisting of daily IV antibiotics or diuretics, STAT labs, and rapid turnaround imaging and cardiodiagnostics. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Days alive and out of hospital (DAOH) in the 30 days following the index ED visit. Secondary outcomes were the number of hospital bed-days avoided, as well as 30-day ED revisits, hospital readmissions, and mortality. RESULTS: The NDC had 1009 encounters (mean age, 54.4 years [SD 14.6]; 448 female [44%]) during the study period, 420 (42%) of which were referred from the ED. Of these, 298 (71%) matched to 4666 ED visits (mean age, 53.3 years [SD 15.2]; 2019 female [43%]) in the year prior to NDC launch on age, sex, the first set of laboratory and vital sign data obtained in the ED (i.e., presenting illness severity), and an exact match on primary diagnosis group. Unadjusted mean DAOH in the NDC cohort was 29.5 days (SD 2.3) compared to 24.9 days (SD 5.5) in the control cohort. Adjusting for the same features in the matching algorithm showed NDC treatment was associated with an average of 3.85 (SD 0.20) more DAOH compared to hospitalization (p<0.001), translating to 358-1294 hospital bed-days saved over the study period. NDC patients had significantly higher rates of 30-day ED revisits per 100 encounters (20.5 versus 13.0, p<0.001), but significantly lower rates of 30-day hospital readmissions per 100 encounters (5.7 versus 11.0, p<0.001) and morality (0% versus 0.9%, p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The NDC is a feasible and safe alternative to hospitalization, and promising strategy for managing ED and hospital capacity and reducing healthcare expenditures.