Revising Diagnosis-Related Groups for Neonates
- 1 July 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) in Pediatrics
- Vol. 84 (1) , 49-61
- https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.84.1.49
Abstract
Groups of neonates who are usually treated at hospitals that provide specialized pediatric care are not adequately classified by the use of diagnosis-related groups (DRGs). Therefore, a set of revised DRGs, pediatric modified DRGs (PM-DRGs), have been developed. Use of PM-DRGs substantially improves the classification of neonates in the following ways: a single pediatric modified major diagnostic category has been defined to include only and all neonates (patients younger than 29 days of age when admitted to the hospital); deaths and transfers of newborns are no longer combined into a single group; birth weight (rather than diagnosis) is used as the primary variable to differentiate categories of neonates; and duration of mechanical ventilation, presence of major problems, and surgery are used to define specific PM-DRGs. A total of 46 PM-DRGs have been developed to replace the 7 DRGs for neonates. Based on a sample of discharged patients from 13 children's hospitals, the overall variance reduction in duration of stay for neonates using PM-DRGs was 38.7% compared with 20.4% for DRGs. Variance reduction for PM-DRGs was 45.9% compared with 16.3% for DRGs when operating cost per case was used instead of duration of stay. After removing outliers at 150 days, the duration of stay variance reduction was 53.3% vs 23.6%, respectively, and the operating cost variance reduction was 58.8% vs 17.8%, respectively.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Frequency and Cost of Diagnosis-Related Group Outliers Among NewbornsPediatrics, 1987
- Is Chronic Lung Disease in Low Birth Weight Infants Preventable? A Survey of Eight CentersPediatrics, 1987
- Alternative to Diagnosis-Related Groups for Newborn Intensive CarePediatrics, 1986
- Back Transport of Neonates: Improved Efficiency of Tertiary Nursery Bed UtilizationPediatrics, 1983