University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
BJOG. 2015 Oct;122(11):1495-505. doi: 10.1111/1471-0528.13515. Epub 2015 Jul 22.
We sought to determine the economic costs associated with moderate and late preterm birth.
An economic study was nested within a prospective cohort study.
Infants born between 32(+0) and 36(+6) weeks of gestation in the East Midlands of England. A sample of infants born at ≥37 weeks of gestation acted as controls.
Data on resource use, estimated from a National Health Service (NHS) and personal social services perspective, and separately from a societal perspective, were collected between birth and 24 months corrected age (or death), and valued in pounds sterling, at 2010-11 prices. Descriptive statistics and multivariable analyses were used to estimate the relationship between gestational age at birth and economic costs.
Cumulative resource use and economic costs over the first two years of life.
Of all eligible births, 1146 (83%) preterm and 1258 (79%) term infants were recruited. Mean (standard error) total societal costs from birth to 24 months were £12 037 (£1114) and £5823 (£1232) for children born moderately preterm (32(+0) -33(+6) weeks of gestation) and late preterm (34(+0) -36(+6) weeks of gestation), respectively, compared with £2056 (£132) for children born at term. The mean societal cost difference between moderate and late preterm and term infants was £4657 (bootstrap 95% confidence interval, 95% CI £2513-6803; P < 0.001). Multivariable regressions revealed that, after controlling for clinical and sociodemographic characteristics, moderate and late preterm birth increased societal costs by £7583 (£874) and £1963 (£337), respectively, compared with birth at full term.
Moderate and late preterm birth is associated with significantly increased economic costs over the first 2 years of life. Our economic estimates can be used to inform budgetary and service planning by clinical decision-makers, and economic evaluations of interventions aimed at preventing moderate and late preterm birth or alleviating its adverse consequences.
Moderate and late preterm birth is associated with increased economic costs over the first 2 years of life.
我们旨在确定中度和晚期早产相关的经济成本。
一项经济研究嵌套在一项前瞻性队列研究中。
在英格兰东米德兰兹地区出生于 32(+0)至 36(+6) 周龄的婴儿。出生于≥37 周龄的婴儿样本作为对照组。
在出生至 24 个月校正年龄(或死亡)之间,从国家卫生服务(NHS)和个人社会服务的角度以及从社会的角度收集资源使用数据,并以英镑计价,使用 2010-11 年的价格进行估值。使用描述性统计和多变量分析来估计出生时胎龄与经济成本之间的关系。
生命头两年的累积资源使用和经济成本。
在所有符合条件的分娩中,有 1146 名(83%)早产和 1258 名(79%)足月婴儿被招募。从出生到 24 个月的总社会成本分别为中度早产(32(+0)-33(+6)周)儿童 12037 英镑(1114 英镑)和 5823 英镑(1232 英镑),晚期早产(34(+0)-36(+6)周)儿童分别为 4657 英镑(自举 95%置信区间,95%CI 2513-6803;P<0.001)。多变量回归显示,在控制临床和社会人口统计学特征后,与足月出生相比,中度和晚期早产分别使社会成本增加 7583 英镑(874 英镑)和 1963 英镑(337 英镑)。
中度和晚期早产与生命头 2 年显著增加的经济成本相关。我们的经济估计可用于为临床决策者的预算和服务规划提供信息,并为预防中度和晚期早产或减轻其不良后果的干预措施的经济评估提供信息。
中度和晚期早产与生命头 2 年的经济成本增加相关。