澳大利亚中风和短暂性缺血性发作的急性住院费用。

Joosup Kim, Rohan Grimley, Monique F Kilkenny, Greg Cadigan, Trisha Johnston, Nadine E Andrew, Amanda G Thrift, Natasha A Lannin, Vijaya Sundararajan, Dominique A Cadilhac
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:中风是一种高成本的疾病。对接受治疗的费用和取得的结果进行详细的患者水平评估,为组织和优化卫生系统提供有用的信息。目的:描述卒中和短暂性脑缺血发作(TIA)的住院治疗费用,并调查与费用相关的因素。方法:回顾性队列研究,使用2009年至2013年收集的澳大利亚卒中临床登记处(AuSCR)的数据,与昆士兰的医院管理数据和临床成本数据相关。临床成本核算数据包括有助于国家医院成本核算方案的医院成本的标准化分配。根据患者的人口学、临床和治疗特征描述每次住院的患者水平费用。采用医院聚类的多变量中位数回归来确定与较高成本相关的因素。结果:在22家医院中,在AuSCR的5522例入院患者中,有3909例(71%)的临床成本核算数据可查。与没有临床成本数据的患者相比,有临床成本数据的患者往往是年龄(p < 0.001)和男性(有成本数据的患者占56%,没有成本数据的患者占49%,p < 0.001)。急性发作的中位费用为7945美元(四分位数范围为4176美元至14970美元),中位住院时间为5天(四分位数范围为2至10天)。最昂贵的费用桶与医疗(n = 3897,中位数费用1577美元),护理(n = 3908,中位数费用2478美元)和重症护理(n = 434,中位数费用3064美元)相关。与总费用较高相关的因素是脑出血诊断、较高的社会经济地位、住院卒中和既往卒中史。结论:卒中或TIA住院患者的医疗护理费用较高,平均费用高于影像学和辅助健康等其他费用。影响:将此数据链接扩展到国家数据收集可能为公立医院基于活动的资助提供有价值的见解。应鼓励定期报告这些费用,以优化经济评价。
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Costs of acute hospitalisation for stroke and transient ischaemic attack in Australia.

Background: Stroke is a high-cost condition. Detailed patient-level assessments of the costs of care received and outcomes achieved provide useful information for organisation and optimisation of the health system.

Objectives: To describe the costs of hospital care for stroke and transient ischaemic attack (TIA) and investigate factors associated with costs.

Methods: Retrospective cohort study using data from the Australian Stroke Clinical Registry (AuSCR) collected between 2009 and 2013 linked to hospital administrative data and clinical costing data in Queensland. Clinical costing data include standardised assignment of costs from hospitals that contribute to the National Hospital Costing programme. Patient-level costs for each hospital admission were described according to the demographic, clinical and treatment characteristics of patients. Multivariable median regression with clustering by hospital was used to determine factors associated with greater costs.

Results: Among 22 hospitals, clinical costing data were available for 3909 of 5522 patient admissions in the AuSCR (71%). Compared to those without clinical costing data, patients with clinical costing data were more often aged <65 years (30% with cost data vs 24% without cost data, p < 0.001) and male (56% with cost data vs 49% without cost data, p < 0.001). Median cost of an acute episode was $7945 (interquartile range $4176 to $14970) and the median length of stay was 5 days (interquartile range 2 to 10 days). The most expensive cost buckets were related to medical (n = 3897, median cost $1577), nursing (n = 3908, median cost $2478) and critical care (n = 434, median cost $3064). Factors associated with greater total costs were a diagnosis of intracerebral haemorrhage, greater socioeconomic position, in-hospital stroke and prior history of stroke.

Conclusion: Medical and nursing costs were incurred by most patients admitted with stroke or TIA, and were relatively more expensive on average than other cost buckets such as imaging and allied health.

Implications: Scaling this data linkage to national data collections may provide valuable insights into activity-based funding at public hospitals. Regular report of these costs should be encouraged to optimise economic evaluations.

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