Cornish Patricia, Mittmann Nicole, Gomez Manuel, Cartotto Robert C, Fish Joel S
Department of Pharmacy, Sunnybrook and Women's College Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Am J Clin Dermatol. 2003;4(12):861-7. doi: 10.2165/00128071-200304120-00005.
Few studies have examined the cost associated with burn patients, and those which have been conducted have generally focused on overall hospitalization costs associated with these patients. No studies to date have examined the overall drug utilization and costs of medications used in the treatment of burn patients.
To describe the pattern of drug utilization and associated costs for the treatment of patients admitted to the Ross Tilley Burn Centre at Sunnybrook and Women's College Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
A retrospective chart review was conducted based on the medical records of 30 adult patients (>18 years old) consecutively admitted to the burn center between 1 August 1999 and 30 September 1999. Charts were examined to determine drugs administered, doses and duration of use. Medications administered in the operating room were excluded from the analysis. Drug costs were calculated using hospital acquisition costs (1999 Canadian dollars [$Can]) and medications were categorized by pharmacological class according to the American Hospital Formulary Service. Demographic information for the patients was extracted from the burn center's database. The economic analysis was performed from the perspective of the hospital burn center. A descriptive statistical analysis was completed for all variables; the Pearson correlation coefficient was used to examine the relationship between certain variables. A sensitivity analysis was conducted to examine the impact of patient subgroups on certain variables
Of the 28 patients included in the analysis, 19 were admitted with acute burn injuries, two with toxic epidermal necrolysis and seven for post-burn reconstructive surgery. Patients admitted for acute burns or toxic epidermal necrolysis had the highest associated drug costs. On average, patients received 13 different drugs representing four different pharmacological categories. The mean daily drug cost per patient was $Can18.39 and the mean expenditure per admission was $Can792.97. Opioid analgesics and sedatives accounted for the largest expenditure (50.9%), followed by anti-infective agents (23.4%). For patients admitted with acute burns, there was a good correlation between daily drug costs and mortality risk (r = 0.82, p < 0.001). The findings from this study group were used to extrapolate annual expenses for medications in the burn center and these were estimated to exceed $Can280 300 in 2003.
The findings of this retrospective analysis serve to elucidate the patterns of drug utilization within a population of burn patients and confirm the significant impact of a burn center on an institution's drug expenditure.
很少有研究探讨烧伤患者的相关费用,而且已开展的研究通常聚焦于这些患者的总体住院费用。迄今为止,尚无研究考察烧伤患者治疗中药物的总体使用情况及费用。
描述加拿大安大略省多伦多市桑尼布鲁克与女子学院健康科学中心罗斯·蒂利烧伤中心收治患者的药物使用模式及相关费用。
基于1999年8月1日至1999年9月30日期间连续入住烧伤中心的30例成年患者(年龄>18岁)的病历进行回顾性图表审查。检查图表以确定所使用的药物、剂量和使用时长。手术室使用的药物被排除在分析之外。药物费用使用医院采购成本(1999年加拿大元[$Can])计算,药物根据《美国医院药品集》按药理类别分类。患者的人口统计学信息从烧伤中心数据库中提取。经济分析从医院烧伤中心的角度进行。对所有变量进行描述性统计分析;使用皮尔逊相关系数检验某些变量之间的关系。进行敏感性分析以考察患者亚组对某些变量的影响。
纳入分析的28例患者中,19例因急性烧伤入院,2例因中毒性表皮坏死松解症入院,7例因烧伤后重建手术入院。因急性烧伤或中毒性表皮坏死松解症入院的患者相关药物费用最高。平均而言,患者接受13种不同药物,分属4个不同药理类别。每位患者的日均药物费用为18.39加元,每次入院的平均支出为792.97加元。阿片类镇痛药和镇静剂支出占比最大(50.9%),其次是抗感染药物(23.4%)。对于因急性烧伤入院的患者,日均药物费用与死亡风险之间存在良好相关性(r = 0.82,p < 0.001)。该研究组的结果用于推断烧伤中心药物的年度费用,估计2003年将超过280300加元。
这项回顾性分析的结果有助于阐明烧伤患者群体中的药物使用模式,并证实烧伤中心对机构药物支出的重大影响。