| Literature DB >> 28289832 |
Gunnhildur Gudnadottir1, G Ragnarson Tennvall2, J Stalfors3, J Hellgren3.
Abstract
Tonsillotomy has gradually replaced tonsillectomy as the surgical method of choice in children with upper airway obstruction during sleep, because of less postoperative pain and a shorter recovery time. The aim of this study was to examine the costs related to caregivers' absenteeism from work after tonsillectomy (TE) and tonsillotomy (TT). All tonsillectomies and tonsillotomies in Sweden due to upper airway obstruction during 1 year, reported to the National Tonsil Surgery Register in children aged 1-11 were included, n = 4534. The number of days the child needed analgesics after surgery was used as a proxy to estimate the number of work days lost for the caregiver. Data from the Social Insurance Agency (Försäkringskassan) regarding the days the parents received temporary parental benefits in the month following surgery were also analysed. The indirect costs due to the caregivers' absenteeism after tonsillectomy vs tonsillotomy were calculated, using the human capital method. The patient-reported use of postoperative analgesic use was 77% (n = 3510). Data from the Social Insurance Agency were gathered for all 4534 children. The mean duration of analgesic treatment was 4.6 days (indirect cost of EUR 747). The mean number of days with parental benefits was 2.9 (EUR 667). The indirect cost of tonsillectomy was 61% higher than that of tonsillotomy (EUR 1010 vs EUR 629). The results show that the choice of surgical method affects the indirect costs, favouring the use of tonsillotomy over tonsillectomy for the treatment of children with SDB, due to less postoperative pain.Entities:
Keywords: Absenteeism; Health economy; Indirect cost; Tonsillectomy; Tonsillotomy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28289832 PMCID: PMC5419997 DOI: 10.1007/s00405-017-4526-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 0937-4477 Impact factor: 2.503
Input data relating to indirect costs and production losses
| Variable | Value (SEK) | Value (EUR) |
|---|---|---|
| Average salary per month for men in 2014 (Statistics Sweden) [ | 33,600 | 3694 |
| Average salary per month for women in 2014 (Statistics Sweden) [ | 29,200 | 3210 |
| Production cost per month including payroll taxes, 41.9%, for men in 2014 | 47,678 | 5241 |
| Production cost per month including payroll taxes, 41.9%, for women in 2014 | 41,435 | 4555 |
| Average number of working days per year in Sweden (NIER) [ | 251 | 28 |
| Average production cost per day for men in 2014 | 2279 | 251 |
| Average production cost per day for women in 2014 | 1981 | 218 |
| Average production cost per day in 2014 with the distribution of 37% for men and 63% for women who receive temporary parental benefit to care for children according to the Swedish Social Insurance Agency [ | 2091 | 230 |
Salary costs were calculated to estimate the cost of production losses according to the human capital approach (HCA) [14]. All costs were calculated in SEK in 2014 prices and transformed to euros using the average exchange rate in 2014 of EUR 1 = SEK 9.0968
Fig. 1Flow chart showing the selection of the study population
Average indirect cost per patient calculated from register data in 2011 according to the gender and age of children (EUR, 2014 prices)
| Number of patients | Days with analgesics (min–max)a | Indirect costs (EUR) | Days with temporary parental benefits (min–max)b | Indirect cost (EUR) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender of children | |||||
| Male | 2634 | 4.5 (0–30) | 744 | 2.9 (0–23) | 663 |
| Female | 1900 | 4.6 (0–30) | 750 | 3.0 (0–24) | 691 |
| Age of children | |||||
| 1 | 93 | 4.1 (0–14) | 667 | 3.4 (0–24) | 771 |
| 2 | 524 | 4.6 (0–30) | 755 | 3.3 (0–23) | 755 |
| 3 | 994 | 4.4 (0–30) | 714 | 3.1 (0–23) | 705 |
| 4 | 964 | 4.4 (0–25) | 724 | 3.0 (0–21) | 685 |
| 5 | 701 | 4.6 (0–30) | 757 | 2.8 (0–17) | 638 |
| 6 | 402 | 4.9 (0–17) | 798 | 2.8 (0–19) | 654 |
| 7 | 286 | 4.5 (0–14) | 740 | 2.7 (0–14) | 629 |
| 8 | 207 | 4.7 (0–21) | 773 | 2.6 (0–11) | 601 |
| 9 | 154 | 4.6 (0–21) | 754 | 2.6 (0–12) | 594 |
| 10 | 107 | 5.0 (0–14) | 824 | 2.5 (0–13) | 578 |
| 11 | 102 | 5.5 (0–14) | 901 | 2.7 (0–14) | 620 |
aDays with analgesics are multiplied by 5/7 to eliminate weekends from the calculation
bThe reported number of days with temporary benefits, the actual working days that have been compensated for by the Social Insurance Agency. So, no calculations are needed to exclude the weekends
Average number of days with absence from work for caregivers and production loss related to type of surgery based on register data in 2011 (EUR, 2014 prices)
| Type of surgery |
| Days with analgesicsa | 95% CI | Indirect costs (EUR) | Days with temporary benefitsb | 95% CI | Indirect costs (EUR) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tonsillectomy | 273 | 6.2 | 5.50–6.80 | 1010 | 3.5 | 3.07–4.00 | 813 |
| Adenotonsillectomy | 1117 | 6.3 | 5.96–6,61 | 1031 | 3.5 | 3.24–3.71 | 799 |
| Tonsillotomy | 429 | 3.8 | 3.46–4.19 | 629 | 2.5 | 2.18–2.73 | 564 |
| Tonsillotomy + adenoidectomy | 2705 | 3.8 | 3.65–3.97 | 626 | 2.7 | 2.61–2.84 | 627 |
| Total | 4524 | 4.6 | 4.46–4.69 | 747 | 2.9 | 2.84–3.03 | 674 |
aDays with analgesics are multiplied by 5/7 to eliminate weekends from the calculation
bThe reported number of days with temporary benefits, the actual working days that have been compensated for by the Social Insurance Agency. So, no calculations are needed to exclude the weekends