Literature DB >> 6412640

Toward strategies for cost containment in surgical patients.

W R Drucker, J W Gavett, R Kirshner, W J Messick, G Ingersoll.   

Abstract

The University of Rochester, Department of Surgery, in response to an experimental community-wide limit on hospital budgets, studied high-cost general surgical patients as a potential source of leverage for containment of hospital costs. It was found that a small number of patients impact significantly on hospital costs. In 1980, 3935 patients at Strong Memorial Hospital (SMH) had at least one contact with a general surgical patient care or intensive care unit; 261 patients (6.6%) had total 1980 charges of more than $20,000 each. They contributed 32% of the total of both general surgical charges and patient days. A subset of 2021 patients was selected to represent more precisely the general surgical patient. The 85 high-cost patients (4.2%) of this subset were chosen for intensive study. These patients generated a significant and disproportionate per cent of total (2021) general surgical charges (26.8%) and hospital days (27.6%). Average total charges were more than 8 times those of the complementary general surgical subset (1936). Nineteen of the 85 patients (22.3%) died in the hospital and 42 patients (49.4%) were dead within 2 1/2 years. Forty patients (of the 85) were then further identified as "complex", based on multiple, usually unrelated, illnesses and multiple annual admissions. Tending to be elderly with poor prognoses, 60% of them had died by April 1983. The major criterion of complexity was the lack of a well-focused medical problem; the cure for one problem simply relinquished primacy to another. A parallel study of hospital ancillary procedures disclosed a similar high-cost pattern. Of approximately 4000 ancillary procedures, 100 (2.5%) had annual charges of $100,000 or over, accounting for two-thirds of total 1980 ancillary charges. Roughly 20% of a single patient's ordered procedures accounted for 80% of the patient's ancillary charges, thus allowing concentrated study of a relatively small number of charges. Means for cost containment may be applied logically to the high-cost patient and particularly toward the complex patient. The complex patient is especially suited for consideration, since it is postulated that these patients are endemic to all general hospitals and to all clinical services. Strategies to be developed should include: 1) a managerial system in which physicians have an incentive to contain costs, 2) an online data system, 3) an accurate, efficient way to identify prospective high-cost and complex patients and, 4) awareness by physicians, patients, and society that less expensive modes of diagnosis and therapy are an appropriate response to rationed health resources.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6412640      PMCID: PMC1353294          DOI: 10.1097/00000658-198309000-00005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Surg        ISSN: 0003-4932            Impact factor:   12.969


  21 in total

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Authors:  V R Fuchs
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3.  Autogenous venous grafts ten years later.

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Journal:  Surgery       Date:  1977-12       Impact factor: 3.982

4.  Frequency and clinical description of high-cost patients in 17 acute-care hospitals.

Authors:  S A Schroeder; J A Showstack; H E Roberts
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1979-06-07       Impact factor: 91.245

5.  The inverse relationship between cost and survival.

Authors:  J M Civetta
Journal:  J Surg Res       Date:  1973-03       Impact factor: 2.192

6.  High-cost users of medical care.

Authors:  C J Zook; F D Moore
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1980-05-01       Impact factor: 91.245

7.  The cost of misadventures in colonic surgery. A model for the analysis of adverse outcomes in standard procedures.

Authors:  N P Couch; N L Tilney; F D Moore
Journal:  Am J Surg       Date:  1978-05       Impact factor: 2.565

8.  Medical intensive care: indications, interventions, and outcomes.

Authors:  G E Thibault; A G Mulley; G O Barnett; R L Goldstein; V A Reder; E L Sherman; E R Skinner
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1980-04-24       Impact factor: 91.245

9.  Survival, hospitalization charges and follow-up results in critically ill patients.

Authors:  D J Cullen; L C Ferrara; B A Briggs; P F Walker; J Gilbert
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1976-04-29       Impact factor: 91.245

10.  Use of laboratory tests in a teaching hospital: long-term trends: reductions in use and relative cost.

Authors:  P F Griner
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1979-02       Impact factor: 25.391

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  7 in total

1.  Reducing the costs of ICU admission in Canada without diagnosis-related or case-mix groupings.

Authors:  M J Girotti; S J Brown
Journal:  Can Anaesth Soc J       Date:  1986-11

Review 2.  Cost-effective management of colon and rectal cancer.

Authors:  J A Heine; D A Rothenberger
Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  1991 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 3.352

3.  Academic general internists and managers of teaching hospitals: an agenda for collaboration.

Authors:  P F Griner; L P Brideau
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  1987 May-Jun       Impact factor: 5.128

4.  Surgonomics: the identifier concept. Hospital charges in general surgery and surgical specialties under prospective payment systems.

Authors:  E Muñoz; D M Regan; I B Margolis; L Wise
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1985-07       Impact factor: 12.969

5.  Maintaining quality of care while reducing charges in the ICU. Ten ways.

Authors:  J M Civetta; J A Hudson-Civetta
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1985-10       Impact factor: 12.969

6.  Probability of surviving postoperative acute renal failure. Development of a prognostic index.

Authors:  W G Cioffi; T Ashikaga; R L Gamelli
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1984-08       Impact factor: 12.969

7.  Accelerated surgical stay programs. A mechanism to reduce health care costs.

Authors:  S H Pedersen; L M Douville; T J Eberlein
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1994-04       Impact factor: 12.969

  7 in total

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