Literature DB >> 11837919

Health service costs for patients on the waiting list.

Hude Quan1, Rene Lafreniere, David Johnson.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To find out if the cost of health services was artificially increased because of a delay in surgery due to a lack of resources.
DESIGN: A retrospective cohort study.
SETTING: Three urban hospitals in Calgary, Alta. PATIENTS: The study cohort comprised 4441 patients (1 index procedure for each patient).
INTERVENTIONS: Cholecystectomy, discectomy, hysterectomy, total knee and total hip replacements. OUTCOME MEASURES: The costs for physician claims, use of home care and pharmaceutical prescriptions 1 year before and after the selected procedures, using 1997/98 administrative records and waiting times maintained by Alberta Health and Wellness and Calgary Regional Health Authority.
RESULTS: The median wait for joint surgery (88 d for knee replacements and 65 d for hip replacements) was longer than for the other selected procedures (29 d for cholecystectomies, 21 d for discectomies and 42 d for hysterectomies). Total per patient physician claim costs decreased after surgery (cholecystectomy--30%, discectomy--24%, hip replacement--6%, hysterectomy--23% and knee replacement--4%). Seeing the procedure specialist more than once preoperatively was associated with a greater decrease in postoperative physician claim costs. Longer waits were not associated with more physician claim costs or Blue Cross prescriptions claim costs for seniors (> or = 65 yr) in the year before or after surgery nor were they associated with more physician claim costs during the actual wait compared with a matched postoperative time period.
CONCLUSIONS: No evidence was found to suggest that waiting for 1 of 5 common surgical procedures is correlated with greater health service expenditures pre- or postoperatively. In this study, wait time is not a proxy for health service use nor do health service costs decrease markedly after surgery.

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Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 11837919      PMCID: PMC3692702     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Surg        ISSN: 0008-428X            Impact factor:   2.089


  1 in total

1.  Are there better ways to determine wait times?

Authors:  Joseph Schaafsma
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2006-05-23       Impact factor: 8.262

  1 in total

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