Literature DB >> 21407098

Economic impact to employers of treatment options for cardiac arrhythmias in the US health system.

Nathan L Kleinman1, Nicholas J Rohrbacker, Sarah A White, Jamie L March, Matthew R Reynolds.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To measure relative employer-sponsored postablation costs for cardiac arrhythmias (CA), specifically atrial fibrillation (AF).
METHODS: Regression-Controlled Employee/Spouse Database study (2001 to 2008) comparing CA patients with and without ablation and AF patients with and without ablation. Regression-adjusted monthly medical, pharmacy, sick leave, and short-term disability costs were calculated 11 months before index to 36 months after index (first ablation date or average date for nonablation patients). Relative pre/postindex comparisons between ablation and nonablation cohorts were calculated and time until ablation procedure cost recovery extrapolated.
RESULTS: Few CA (280 of 11,291; 2.48%) and AF (93 of 3062; 3.04%) patients received ablation. Ablation cohorts cost less than nonablation cohorts postablation. Estimated total ablation-period costs were recovered 38 to 50 months postablation, including employee absence payment recovery within 18 months.
CONCLUSION: Current ablation use in employer-sponsored health plans may improve health care and absence costs over time.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21407098     DOI: 10.1097/JOM.0b013e31820fd1c9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Occup Environ Med        ISSN: 1076-2752            Impact factor:   2.162


  1 in total

1.  Improvement in quality of life after catheter ablation for paroxysmal versus long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation: a prospective study with 3-year follow-up.

Authors:  Veronika Bulková; Martin Fiala; Stěpán Havránek; Jan Simek; Libor Skňouřil; Jaroslav Januška; Jindřich Spinar; Dan Wichterle
Journal:  J Am Heart Assoc       Date:  2014-07-18       Impact factor: 5.501

  1 in total

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