Tracks admission milestones against expected LOS benchmarks with barrier identification. Use when managing length of stay, identifying discharge barriers, or optimizing bed utilization.
Tracks admission milestones against expected LOS benchmarks with barrier identification to optimize throughput and patient outcomes.
Length of stay (LOS) is the single most impactful metric in hospital medicine, affecting patient safety, hospital finances, and regulatory compliance simultaneously. Each additional inpatient day increases the risk of hospital-acquired conditions (HAIs, falls, deconditioning, VTE) by 5-10%. CMS uses LOS relative to the geometric mean for each MS-DRG as a core measure for hospital efficiency, and LOS outliers trigger utilization review, denial risk, and Case Mix Index scrutiny.
The national average medical LOS is 4.5 days, but avoidable days (days without clinical justification for inpatient stay) account for 15-25% of total hospital days in most facilities. Common causes include delayed discharge planning, pending authorization, social placement barriers, and failure to anticipate discharge needs on admission. Hospitalists who actively manage LOS milestones reduce avoidable days by 30-40% and generate measurable improvements in bed availability, patient throughput, and hospital margin.
Before initiating LOS management for a patient or census, confirm:
On day of admission, document the following LOS framework:
| Element | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Admitting diagnosis | [Diagnosis] | H&P |
| Expected MS-DRG | [DRG number] | Coding/CDI |
| Geometric mean LOS | [X.X days] | CMS IPPS tables |
| Target discharge date | [Date] | Clinical judgment + GMLOS |
| Discharge disposition | Home / SNF / Rehab / LTACH / Hospice | Case management assessment |
Common GMLOS benchmarks (medical DRGs):
At each daily round, assess progress against discharge milestones:
Hospital Day 1 (Admission Day)
Hospital Day 2
Hospital Day 3 (GMLOS Alert for Short-stay DRGs)
Hospital Day 4+ (LOS Outlier Territory for Most Medical DRGs)
Use the following barrier taxonomy to systematically address delays:
| Category | Barrier | Mitigation Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical | Awaiting procedure | Schedule within 24h or consider outpatient |
| Clinical | IV-only medications | Assess PO conversion or OPAT eligibility |
| Clinical | Pending cultures/path | Discharge with follow-up plan if not clinically urgent |
| Insurance | SNF authorization pending | Start process on admission, not at discharge |
| Placement | No SNF bed available | Expand search radius; escalate to CM leadership |
| Social | No safe discharge environment | Engage social work; assess respite or shelter options |
| Patient | Refusing discharge | Document capacity, involve patient advocate, address concerns |
| System | Awaiting consultant sign-off | Direct physician-to-physician communication |
| Equipment | DME not arranged | Order on admission if need is anticipated |
Work proactively with utilization review to prevent denials:
For each patient or census report: