Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts2Sheba Medical Center, Ramat-Gan, Israel.
JAMA Intern Med. 2013;173(22):2039-46. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.9763.
Health care-associated infections (HAIs) account for a large proportion of the harms caused by health care and are associated with high costs. Better evaluation of the costs of these infections could help providers and payers to justify investing in prevention.
To estimate costs associated with the most significant and targetable HAIs.
For estimation of attributable costs, we conducted a systematic review of the literature using PubMed for the years 1986 through April 2013. For HAI incidence estimates, we used the National Healthcare Safety Network of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Studies performed outside the United States were excluded. Inclusion criteria included a robust method of comparison using a matched control group or an appropriate regression strategy, generalizable populations typical of inpatient wards and critical care units, methodologic consistency with CDC definitions, and soundness of handling economic outcomes.
Three review cycles were completed, with the final iteration carried out from July 2011 to April 2013. Selected publications underwent a secondary review by the research team.
Costs, inflated to 2012 US dollars.
Using Monte Carlo simulation, we generated point estimates and 95% CIs for attributable costs and length of hospital stay. On a per-case basis, central line-associated bloodstream infections were found to be the most costly HAIs at $45,814 (95% CI, $30,919-$65,245), followed by ventilator-associated pneumonia at $40,144 (95% CI, $36,286-$44,220), surgical site infections at $20,785 (95% CI, $18,902-$22,667), Clostridium difficile infection at $11,285 (95% CI, $9118-$13,574), and catheter-associated urinary tract infections at $896 (95% CI, $603-$1189). The total annual costs for the 5 major infections were $9.8 billion (95% CI, $8.3-$11.5 billion), with surgical site infections contributing the most to overall costs (33.7% of the total), followed by ventilator-associated pneumonia (31.6%), central line-associated bloodstream infections (18.9%), C difficile infections (15.4%), and catheter-associated urinary tract infections (<1%).
While quality improvement initiatives have decreased HAI incidence and costs, much more remains to be done. As hospitals realize savings from prevention of these complications under payment reforms, they may be more likely to invest in such strategies.
医疗保健相关感染(HAI)占医疗保健造成的损害的很大一部分,并且与高成本相关。更好地评估这些感染的成本可以帮助提供者和支付者证明投资预防是合理的。
估计与最重要和最可预防的 HAI 相关的成本。
为了估计归因成本,我们使用 PubMed 对 1986 年至 2013 年 4 月的文献进行了系统回顾。对于 HAI 发病率估计,我们使用了疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)的国家医疗保健安全网络。
排除在美国境外进行的研究。纳入标准包括使用匹配对照组进行稳健的比较方法或适当的回归策略、具有住院病房和重症监护病房典型代表性的可推广人群、与 CDC 定义一致的方法学以及处理经济结果的合理性。
完成了三轮审查,最后一轮审查于 2011 年 7 月至 2013 年 4 月进行。选定的出版物由研究团队进行了二次审查。
成本,按 2012 年美元 inflation。
使用蒙特卡罗模拟,我们生成了归因成本和住院时间的点估计值和 95%置信区间。在每例病例的基础上,发现中心静脉导管相关血流感染是最昂贵的 HAI,为 45814 美元(95%CI,30919-65245),其次是呼吸机相关性肺炎为 40144 美元(95%CI,36286-44220),手术部位感染为 20785 美元(95%CI,18902-22667),艰难梭菌感染为 11285 美元(95%CI,9118-13574),以及导管相关尿路感染为 896 美元(95%CI,603-1189)。5 种主要感染的年总成本为 98 亿美元(95%CI,83-115 亿美元),手术部位感染对总费用的贡献最大(占总费用的 33.7%),其次是呼吸机相关性肺炎(31.6%),中心静脉导管相关血流感染(18.9%),艰难梭菌感染(15.4%),以及导管相关尿路感染(<1%)。
尽管质量改进举措已经降低了 HAI 的发病率和成本,但仍有许多工作要做。随着医院在支付改革下从预防这些并发症中节省成本,他们可能更愿意投资于这些策略。