| Literature DB >> 26714744 |
Eva Pagano1, Alessio Petrelli2,3, Roberta Picariello4, Franco Merletti5,6, Roberto Gnavi7, Graziella Bruno8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic diseases impose large economic burdens. Cost analysis is not straightforward, particularly when the goal is to relate costs to specific patterns of covariates, and to compare costs between diseased and healthy populations. Using different statistical methods this study describes the impact on results and conclusions of analyzing health care costs in a population with diabetes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26714744 PMCID: PMC4696194 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-015-1241-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Determinants of annual healthcare costs, mean annual predictions and cost ratios (patients with vs. without diabetes), Root Mean Squared Errors (RMSE), by several data modeling approaches
| Model | Diabetes (CI 95 %) | Cost (€) per person/year, patients with diabetes ( | CI 95 %a | Cost (€) per person/year, patients without diabetes ( | CI 95 %a | Cost Ratio (with vs. without diabetes) | RMSE | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| One-part models | |||||||||
|
| 1,832.76 | 1,795.56–1,869.95 | 3348.6 | 3343.8–3353.9 | 831.2 | 829.8–832.4 | 4.03 | 3,342.4 | |
|
| 6.0 | 5.84–6.16 | 6146.5 | 6116.9–6178.6 | 1343.6 | 1340.5–1347.0 | 4.57 | 3,670.0 | |
|
| 2.6 | 2.56–2.67 | 3878.1 | 3867.0–3891.1 | 826.1 | 824.8–827.3 | 4.69 | 3,351.1 | |
| Two-part models | |||||||||
| Part 1 | |||||||||
|
| 2.40 | 2.18–2.64 | - | ||||||
| Part 2 | |||||||||
|
| 1,710.36 | 1,668.40–1,752.32 | 3392.0 | 3387.2–3397.5 | 1058.8 | 1057.4–1060.4 | 3.20 | 3,732.2 | |
|
| 3.3 | 3.21–3.32 | 4119.9 | 4104.4–4136.3 | 1175.2 | 1173.2–1177.6 | 5.60 | 3,760.6 | |
|
| 2.2 | 2.21–2.28 | 3700.1 | 3690.0–3711.1 | 1050.8 | 1049.5–1052.4 | 3.50 | 3,735.6 | |
| Two part model (logistic + gamma) | 3662.26 | 3652.07–3673.25 | 891.9 | 890.63–893.54 | 4.10 | 3,739.8 | |||
aderived by boostrapping method
bthe log transformed outcome variable was (cost + 1)
Fig. 1Distribution of annual healthcare costs among residents in the city of Turin (n = 896,915). Note. Excluded subjects with zero costs (20.8 %) and costs above 1000 euros