Disciplina de Diabetes, State University Hospital of Rio de Janeiro (UERJ), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil- Avenida 28 de setembro, 77, Terceiro andar, Vila Isabel 20551-030, Brazil.
Diabetol Metab Syndr. 2013 Dec 27;5(1):83. doi: 10.1186/1758-5996-5-83.
Regional differences in the clinical care of Type 1 diabetes (T1D) in Brazil have been recently described. This study aimed to estimate the costs of T1D from the public health care system's perspective across the regions of Brazil and to determine the components that influence these costs.
This was a retrospective, cross-sectional and nationwide multicenter study conducted between December 2008 and December 2010 in 28 public clinics in 20 Brazilian cities. The study included 3,180 T1D subjects receiving healthcare from the National Brazilian Healthcare System (NBHCS) with a follow-up of at least one year. The direct medical costs were derived from the costs of medications, supplies, examinations, visits to the center, medical procedures and hospitalizations that occurred during the previous year. Clinical and demographic factors that determined the differences in the cost across four geographic regions (southeast, south, north/northeast and mid-west) were investigated.
The per capita mean annual direct medical costs of T1D in US$ were 1,466.36, 1,252.83, 1,148.09 and 1,396.30 in southeast, south, north/northeast and mid-west regions, respectively. The costs of T1D in the southeast region were higher compared to south (p < 0.001) and north/northeast regions (p = < 0.001), but not to the mid-west (p = 0.146) region. The frequency of self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) was different across the regions as well as the daily number of SMBG, use of insulin pumps or basal or prandial insulin analogs. Age, ethnicity, duration of diabetes, level of care, socioeconomic status and the prevalence of chronic diabetic complications differed among the regions. In a regression model the determinants of the costs were the presence of microvascular diabetes-related complications (p < 0.001), higher economic status (p < 0.001), and being from the southeast region (p < 0.001).
The present data reinforce the regional differences in the costs of T1D and in the socioeconomic profile and health care provided to the patients with T1D in specialized public centers in Brazil. Both factors influenced directly the costs of T1D and should be considered for discussing future health policies.
最近描述了巴西 1 型糖尿病(T1D)临床护理的区域差异。本研究旨在从公共卫生保健系统的角度估算巴西各地区 T1D 的成本,并确定影响这些成本的因素。
这是一项回顾性、横断面和全国性多中心研究,于 2008 年 12 月至 2010 年 12 月在巴西 20 个城市的 28 家公立诊所进行。该研究纳入了 3180 名接受巴西国家卫生保健系统(NBHCS)医疗服务且随访时间至少一年的 T1D 患者。直接医疗成本来源于前一年药物、用品、检查、中心就诊、医疗程序和住院治疗的费用。调查了临床和人口统计学因素,这些因素决定了四个地理区域(东南部、南部、北部/东北部和中西部)之间的成本差异。
以美元计,T1D 患者的人均年直接医疗费用分别为东南部、南部、北部/东北部和中西部地区的 1466.36、1252.83、1148.09 和 1396.30。与南部(p<0.001)和北部/东北部地区(p<0.001)相比,东南部地区的 T1D 费用更高,但与中西部地区(p=0.146)相比则没有差异。不同地区的自我血糖监测(SMBG)频率以及 SMBG 的每日次数、胰岛素泵的使用或基础或餐时胰岛素类似物的使用情况均有所不同。不同地区的年龄、种族、糖尿病病程、护理水平、社会经济地位和慢性糖尿病并发症的患病率也存在差异。在回归模型中,费用的决定因素是微血管糖尿病相关并发症的存在(p<0.001)、较高的经济状况(p<0.001)和来自东南部地区(p<0.001)。
本研究数据进一步证实了巴西 T1D 成本以及专门的公立中心为 T1D 患者提供的社会经济状况和医疗服务的区域差异。这两个因素都直接影响了 T1D 的成本,应在讨论未来卫生政策时予以考虑。