Schmitt Susan K, Sneed LaShika, Phibbs Ciaran S
Health Economics Resource Center, Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, California, USA.
Pediatrics. 2006 Jan;117(1):154-60. doi: 10.1542/peds.2005-0484.
We sought to describe the current costs of newborn care by using population-based data, which includes linked vital statistics and hospital records for both mothers and infants. These data allow costs to be reported by episode of care (birth), instead of by hospitalization.
Data for this study were obtained from the linked 2000 California birth cohort data. These data (n = 518,704), provided by the California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD), contain infant vital statistics data (birth and death certificate data) linked to infant and maternal hospital discharge summaries. In addition to the infant and maternal hospital discharge summaries associated with delivery, these data include discharge summaries for all infant hospital-to-hospital transfers and maternal prenatal hospitalizations. The linkage algorithm that is used by OSHPD in creating the linked cohort data file is highly accurate. More than 99% of the maternal and infant discharge abstracts were linked successfully with the birth certificates. These data were also linked successfully with the infant discharge abstracts from the receiving hospital for 99% of the infants who were transferred to another hospital. The hospital discharge records were the source of the hospital charges and length-of-stay information summarized in this study. Hospital costs were estimated by adjusting charges by hospital-specific ratios of costs to charges obtained from the OSHPD Hospital Financial Reporting data. Costs, lengths of stay, and mortality were summarized by birth weight groups, gestational age, cost categories, and types of admissions.
Low birth weight (LBW) and very low birth weight (VLBW) infants had significantly longer hospital stays and accounted for a significantly higher proportion of total hospital costs. The average hospital stay for LBW infants ranged from 6.2 to 68.1 days, whereas the average hospital stay for infants who weighed >2500 g at birth was 2.3 days. Overall, VLBW infants accounted for 0.9% of cases but 35.7% of costs, whereas LBW infants accounted for 5.9% of cases but 56.6% of total hospital costs. Although total maternal and infant costs were similar (approximately 1.6 billion dollars), the distribution of maternal costs was much less skewed. For infants, 5% of infants accounted for 76% of total infant hospital costs. Conversely, the most expensive 3% of deliveries accounted for only 17% of total maternal costs.
The very smallest infants make up a hugely disproportionate share of costs; more than half of all neonatal costs are incurred by LBW or premature infants. Maternal costs are similar in magnitude to newborn costs, but they are much less skewed than for infants. Preventing premature deliveries could yield very large cost savings, in addition to saving lives.
我们试图利用基于人群的数据来描述当前新生儿护理的成本,这些数据包括母亲和婴儿的关联生命统计数据及医院记录。这些数据使成本能够按护理事件(分娩)报告,而非按住院情况报告。
本研究的数据来自2000年加利福尼亚出生队列的关联数据。这些由加利福尼亚州全州卫生规划与发展办公室(OSHPD)提供的数据(n = 518,704)包含与婴儿和母亲医院出院小结相关联的婴儿生命统计数据(出生和死亡证明数据)。除了与分娩相关的婴儿和母亲医院出院小结外,这些数据还包括所有婴儿医院间转运及母亲产前住院的出院小结。OSHPD在创建关联队列数据文件时使用的链接算法非常准确。超过99%的母亲和婴儿出院摘要与出生证明成功关联。对于99%转至另一家医院的婴儿,这些数据也与接收医院的婴儿出院摘要成功关联。医院出院记录是本研究中总结的医院收费和住院时长信息的来源。通过用从OSHPD医院财务报告数据中获取的特定医院成本与收费比率来调整收费,估算医院成本。按出生体重组、孕周、成本类别和入院类型总结成本、住院时长和死亡率。
低出生体重(LBW)和极低出生体重(VLBW)婴儿的住院时间显著更长,占医院总成本的比例也显著更高。LBW婴儿的平均住院时间为6.2至68.1天,而出生体重>2500 g的婴儿平均住院时间为2.3天。总体而言,VLBW婴儿占病例的0.9%,但占成本的35.7%,而LBW婴儿占病例的5.9%,但占医院总成本的56.