ISSN: 2455-5282
Global Journal of Medical and Clinical Mini Reviews
Mini Review       Open Access      Peer-Reviewed

What we Learned from Covid19 on behalf of Hospital Management?

Malhan S1*, Torgay A2, Kavuncubası S1, Alzhanov S3, Kikimbayeva R4, Malchenko V5, Zhunussov Y6 and Haberal A7

1Department of Healthcare Management, Baskent University, Turkey
2Medical Director, Baskent University Ankara Hospital, Turkey
3Medical Director, Semey Medical University Hospital, Kazakhstan
4Deputy Director for Medical Work, Semey Medical University Hospital, Kazakhstan
5Manager Physician, Semey Medical University Hospital, Kazakhstan
6Chairman of the Board-Rector, Semey Medical University, Kazakhstan
7HealthGroup Director, Rector, Baskent University, Turkey
*Corresponding author: Simten Malhan, PhD, Professor, Department of Health Care Management, Baskent University, Ankara, Turkey, Tel: +903122664646; E-mail: simtenmalhan1@gmail.com
Received: 21 October, 2020 | Accepted: 06 November, 2020 | Published: 07 November, 2020
Keywords: COVID19; Hospital management; Cost of disease

Cite this as

Malhan S, Torgay A, Kavuncubası S, Alzhanov S, Kikimbayeva R, et al. (2020) What we Learned from Covid19 on behalf of Hospital Management? Glob J Medical Clin Case Rep 7(2): 107-108. DOI: 10.17352/2455-5282.000110

Aim: Our aim is to take an attention to hospital management concept during COVID19.

Method: We searched pubmed with key words ; hospital, management, and COVID and reached 2054 articles. 1881 articles were full texts. We searched all abstracts and determined 357 systematic review and meta-analysis. But only 40 articles were directly related to hospital management and COVID-19. 40 articles were interpreted and areas for hospital managers to study were determined.

Result: The articles about hospital management are not enough to reference to other countries. So countries should publish their experiences and also we have to learn cost of COVID in order to find good practices for hospital management

Conclusion: Literature needs more articles about hospital management concept.

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a declared global pandemic. Although scientists stimulated the world against the new pandemic, neither developed nor developing countries are prepared. The 2019 novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV), born in a wet market in Wuhan, Hubei province, China at the end of 2019, has gained intense attention nationwide and globally [1]. As known, hospital management is a very complex issue. After COVID-19, it became more complex than before. We watch developed countries’ health systems and understand how much more hospital management is important. In order to provide sustainability and access to health services, hospital managers in a micro level and health system administrators in a macro level need pro-active strategies. COVID-19 taught us we need to deal with communicable diseases as much as non-communicable diseases. Because we still haven’t won the fight against communicable diseases. That’s why we searched hospital management concept through the countries’ examples. Until June 20th, 2020, 23,350 articles have been published about COVID-19 in Pubmed. We use hospital, management and COVID as key words and reached 2054 articles. 1881 articles were full texts. We searched all abstracts and determined 357 systematic review and meta-analysis. But only 40 articles were directly related to hospital management and COVID-19. 40 articles were interpreted and areas for hospital managers to study were determined. In our opinion, the number of publications related to hospital management is quite small. The global health system needs to spend more energy on this issue to meet people’s unlimited demands and needs. Hospitals should work to achieve maximum health output at low cost. Although health managers agree to manage resources at low costs, unfortunately, it is not quite possible in the conditions we are in. Even in developed countries around the world, we are witnessing that resources are running out and patients are unable to access services. Because hospitals faced long hospitalizations, intensive care, unexpected drug use, caused by the course of the disease. Since we learned about the disease recently, there were many changes in the clinical treatment processes, and many health services had to be passive until the treatment algorithm was established. In addition, many unwanted terminations, long hospitalizations, the use of resources above the optimum amount in the face of an unexpected pandemic have rendered many countries’ health systems unsustainable.

If hospital managements can effectively distribute its resources by taking proactive strategies, it will ensure their sustainability, but other than that, it is the insurances and health policies adopted by states that will ensure the financial sustainability of hospital managements. What was the cost of COVID-19 patients in particular? What will happen? Given the changes in treatment protocols and unforeseen case increases and pessimistic scenarios, how far the costs will rise? We need more information on both optimistic and pessimistic scenarios. For this reason, on the articles we examined, we determined that they focus on management and demand forecast of intensive care, capacity, hospitalizations, medicines, operation rooms and emergency departments [2-14]. We also noticed epidemiological studies and studies related to public health management captures managements’ interest. We think the next stage is to calculate the cost of the disease as soon as possible. As we seen, due to lack of intensive care bed, the hospitals worked over capacity and also transferred their patients to the other hospitals. At the same time because of unexpected pandemic, interior hospital was reorganized. Such as several medical and surgical units were dismantled, to create dedicated COVID-19 units, rapidly occupied by patients undergoing respiratory support. Non-Covid19 patients was discharged or transferred external hospital before completed treatment [15]. It means that cost is going up. Bartsch, et al. developed a direct medical cost model for US citizens who got infected. It is an estimation model in order to understand the potential economic benefits of reducing the burden of the disease. A single symptomatic COVID-19 case could incur a median direct medical cost of $3,045 during the course of the infection alone. If 80 percent of the US population were to get infected, the result could be a median of 44.6 million hospitalizations, 10.7 million intensive care unit (ICU) admissions, 6.5 million patients requiring a ventilator, 249.5 million hospital bed days, and $654.0 billion in direct medical costs over the course of the pandemic. If 20 percent of the US population were to get infected, there could be a median of 11.2 million hospitalizations, 2.7 million ICU admissions, 1.6 million patients requiring a ventilator, 62.3 million hospital bed days, and $163.4 billion in direct medical costs over the course of the pandemic [16]. These results show that if health authorities do not manage infection, the limited resources will not against requirement of sick people. Also the health system’s viability is in danger. That’s why countries need to benchmark of different health care management. Only after then, pro-active strategies can be carried out.

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© 2020 Malhan S, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
 

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