| Literature DB >> 24274747 |
Emma Hanmore, Grant Maclaine, Fiona Garin, Alexander Alonso, Nicolas Leroy, Lewis Ruff1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Measures to protect healthcare workers where there is risk of injury or infection from medical sharps became mandatory in the European Union (EU) from May 2013. Our research objective was to estimate the net budget impact of introducing safety-engineered devices (SEDs) for prevention of needlestick injuries (NSIs) in a Belgian hospital.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24274747 PMCID: PMC4222860 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-489
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Estimated annual number, cost and NSI rate associated with procedures in Belgium
| Injection | 553 | 0.014 | 0.046 | 10.8 [ | 1.5 |
| Infusion therapy | 120 | 0.400 | 0.600 | 26.0 [ | 8.8 |
| Diabetes insulin administration | 50 [ | 0.095 | 0.315 | 23.5 [ | 3.3** |
| Blood collection | 193 | 0.170 | 0.270 | 23.4* [ | 7.0*** |
*It was assumed that arterial and venous blood collection procedures result in the same percentage of NSIs.
**It was assumed that the reduction in NSIs after the introduction of 2nd generation safety-engineered diabetes care devices is the same as that achieved by injection SEDs.
***It was assumed that safety-engineered arterial and venous blood collection devices achieve the same reduction.
Estimated prevalence and transmission rates of blood-borne viruses
| Prevalence in a hospital population [ | 4.9% | 7.9% | 9.0% |
| Transmission rate | 30% [ | 1.8% [ | 0.31% [ |
Direct costs associated with NSIs
| Testing for blood-borne viruses [ | |
| | €38.76 |
| | €58.52 |
| | €43.91 |
| Cost of staffing and administration per NSI [ | €68.81 |
| Cost of PEP for hepatitis B and HIV [ | |
| | €374.61 |
| | €918.76 |
| Cost of treatment of blood-borne viruses [ | €2,377.44 |
| | |
| | €16,127.76 |
| | €16,999.83 |
Average direct costs incurred per low- and high-risk NSI
| Source patient | Known | | Unknown | |
| Infection status | Uninfected | Infected | Uninfected | Infected |
| Testing | €141.20 | €141.20 | €85.09 | €85.09 |
| Staff and administration | €68.81 | €68.81 | €68.81 | €68.81 |
| PEP | – | €374.61 | €918.76 | €918.76 |
| Disease treatment | – | €142.99 | – | €142.99 |
| Total direct cost per NSI | ||||
| Relative incidence within risk category | ||||
| Total direct cost per NSI, by risk category | ||||
Average indirect costs incurred per low- and high-risk NSI
| Counselling [ | €40.27 | €238.45 |
| Staff absence [ | €22.95 | €229.51 |
| Compensation and litigation [ | – | €376.26* |
| Total indirect cost per NSI |
*Estimated based on an average of the costs reported by three English compensation cases involving a healthcare worker experiencing an NSI [42-44], weighted by the relative proportion of high-risk NSIs resulting in seroconversion to either hepatitis B, hepatitis C or HIV from an infected source, and converted to 2012 Euro [38].
Figure 1Estimated incidence of events over the model’s five-year time horizon. (a) Number of NSIs experienced, and (b) total healthcare worker exposures to blood-borne diseases.
Figure 2Breakdown of NSI management cost savings, by cost category.
Figure 3Results of one-way sensitivity analyses.
Figure 4Results of scenario analyses.