Reeder Matthew R, Kim Jaewhan, Nance Amy, Krikov Sergey, Feldkamp Marcia L, Randall Harper, Botto Lorenzo D
Division of Medical Genetics, Department of Pediatrics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Birth Defects Res A Clin Mol Teratol. 2015 Nov;103(11):962-71. doi: 10.1002/bdra.23414. Epub 2015 Jul 28.
Newborn screening for critical congenital heart disease (CCHD) using pulse oximetry is being implemented in the United States and internationally; however, few data are available on the associated in-hospital costs and use of resources.
Time and motion study in well-baby nurseries at two large urban hospitals in Utah using different approaches to pulse oximetry screening. Two observers recorded the time for each screening step together with provider and equipment characteristics. Structured questionnaire provided additional information on labor and equipment costs.
Fifty-three CCHD screens were observed. At site A (n = 22), screening was mostly done by medical assistants (95%) using disposable probes (100%); at site B (n = 31), screening was mostly performed by certified nursing assistants (90%) using reusable probes (90%). Considering only first screens (n = 53), the median screen time was 8.6 min (range: 3.2-23.2), with no significant difference between sites. The overall cost ($ in 2014) of screening per baby was $24.52 at site A and $2.60 at site B. Nearly all the variation in cost (90%) was due to the cost of disposable probes; labor costs were similar between sites.
CCHD screening by means of pulse oximetry is reasonably fast for most babies, leading to relative small labor costs with little variation by provider type. The main driver of costs is equipment: in a high throughput setting, reusable probes are currently associated with considerable cost saving compared with disposable probes. As programs expand to universal screening, improved and cheaper technologies could lead to considerable economies of scale.
美国和国际上正在采用脉搏血氧测定法对危重型先天性心脏病(CCHD)进行新生儿筛查;然而,关于相关住院费用和资源使用情况的数据却很少。
在犹他州两家大型城市医院的健康婴儿保育室进行时间和动作研究,采用不同的脉搏血氧测定法筛查方法。两名观察员记录每个筛查步骤的时间以及医护人员和设备特征。结构化问卷提供了有关劳动力和设备成本的更多信息。
观察了53次CCHD筛查。在A地(n = 22),筛查主要由医疗助理(95%)使用一次性探头(100%)进行;在B地(n = 31),筛查主要由注册护理助理(90%)使用可重复使用探头(90%)进行。仅考虑首次筛查(n = 53),中位筛查时间为8.6分钟(范围:3.2 - 23.2),两地之间无显著差异。A地每个婴儿的筛查总成本(2014年美元)为24.52美元,B地为2.60美元。几乎所有成本差异(90%)都归因于一次性探头的成本;两地的劳动力成本相似。
对于大多数婴儿来说,通过脉搏血氧测定法进行CCHD筛查速度相当快,导致劳动力成本相对较低,且因医护人员类型不同而变化不大。成本的主要驱动因素是设备:在高流量环境中,与一次性探头相比,目前可重复使用探头可节省大量成本。随着项目扩大到普遍筛查,改进且更便宜的技术可能会带来可观的规模经济。