From the Axe Santé des populations et pratiques optimales en santé (traumatologie-urgence-soins intensifs) (T.V.P., M.S., L.M.), Centre de Recherche du CHU de Québec - Hôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus, Université Laval, Québec City; Department of Social And Preventative Medicine (T.V.P., M.S., L.M.), Université Laval; Institut national d'excellence en santé et en services sociaux (G.B., J.L.), Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2014 Feb;76(2):542-8. doi: 10.1097/TA.0b013e3182ab0dc8.
In 2000, more than 50 million Americans were treated in hospitals following injury, with costs estimated at $80 billion, yet no performance indicator based on costs has been developed and validated specifically for acute trauma care. This study aimed to describe how data on costs have been used to evaluate the performance of acute trauma care hospitals.
A systematic review using MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science, The Cochrane Library, CINAHL, TRIP, and ProQuest was performed in December 2012. Cohort studies evaluating hospital performance for the treatment of injury inpatients in terms of costs were considered eligible. Two authors conducted the screening and the data abstraction independently using a piloted electronic data abstraction form. Methodological quality was evaluated using seven criteria from the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) statement and the Downs and Black tool.
The search retrieved 6,635 studies, of which 10 were eligible for inclusion. Nine studies were conducted in the United States and one in Europe. Six studies used patient charges as a proxy for patient costs, of which four used cost-to-charge ratios. One study estimated costs using average unit costs, and three studies were based on the real costs obtained from a hospital accounting system. Average costs per patient in 2013 US dollar varied between 2,568 and 74,435. Four studies (40%) were considered to be of good methodological quality.
Studies evaluating the performance of trauma hospitals in terms of costs are rare. Most are based on charges rather than costs, and they have low methodological quality. Further research is needed to develop and validate a performance indicator based on inpatient costs that will enable us to monitor trauma centers in terms of resource use.
Systematic review, evidence, level III.
2000 年,超过 5000 万美国人因受伤在医院接受治疗,费用估计为 800 亿美元,但尚未开发和验证专门用于急性创伤护理的基于成本的绩效指标。本研究旨在描述如何使用成本数据评估急性创伤护理医院的绩效。
2012 年 12 月,使用 MEDLINE、EMBASE、Web of Science、The Cochrane Library、CINAHL、TRIP 和 ProQuest 进行了系统评价。评估了以成本为指标评价治疗住院伤害患者的医院绩效的队列研究。两名作者使用试点电子数据提取表独立进行筛选和数据提取。使用来自观察性研究的强化报告标准(STROBE)声明和唐斯和布莱克工具的七个标准评估方法学质量。
检索到 6635 项研究,其中 10 项符合纳入标准。9 项研究在美国进行,1 项在欧洲进行。6 项研究使用患者收费作为患者成本的替代指标,其中 4 项使用成本与收费比。一项研究使用平均单位成本估算成本,三项研究基于从医院会计系统获得的实际成本。2013 年以美元计的每位患者的平均成本在 2568 至 74435 美元之间。四项研究(40%)被认为具有良好的方法学质量。
评估创伤医院成本绩效的研究很少。大多数研究基于收费而非成本,且方法学质量较低。需要进一步研究以开发和验证基于住院患者成本的绩效指标,以便我们能够根据资源利用情况监测创伤中心。
系统评价,证据,III 级。