Gerhardt Heike, Heinzel-Gutenbrunner Monika, Bachmann Christian J
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Philipps-University Marburg, Hans-Sachs-Str. 4-6, DE-35039, Marburg, Germany.
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, LVR-Klinikum Düsseldorf/ Kliniken der Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Bergische Landstraße 2, DE-40629, Düsseldorf, Germany.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2018 Sep 14;18(1):714. doi: 10.1186/s12913-018-3520-0.
For children and adolescents with mental health problems, there is a lack of data as to whether the type of residential area (urban vs. rural) influences healthcare costs for affected individuals. The aim of this study was therefore to explore potential urban vs. rural healthcare cost differences in children and adolescents with conduct disorder (CD), one of the most frequent and cost-intensive child and adolescent psychiatric disorders. Additionally, we aimed to compare healthcare costs of youths with CD, and of youths without this diagnosis.
We analysed data from a German health insurance company, extracting all youths with a CD diagnosis in 2011 (CD group; N = 6337), and an age- and sex-matched group without this diagnosis (control group). For both groups, annual costs per person for outpatient and inpatient healthcare were aggregated, stratified by area of residence (urban vs. rural).
While mean annual overall costs in the CD group did not differ significantly between urban and rural areas of residence (2785 EUR vs. 3557 EUR, p = 0.253), inpatient treatment costs were significantly higher in rural areas (2166 EUR (60.9% of overall costs) vs. 1199 EUR (43.1% of overall costs), p < 0.0005). For outpatient healthcare costs, the reverse effect was found, with significantly higher costs in individuals from urban areas of residence (901 EUR (32.3% of overall costs) vs. 581 EUR (16.3% of overall costs), p < 0.0005). In the control group, no significant rural vs. urban difference was found for either overall health costs, inpatient or outpatient costs. Mean overall costs in the CD group were four times higher than in the control group (3162 (±5934) EUR vs. 795 (±4425) EUR).
This study is the first to demonstrate urban vs. rural differences in healthcare costs among youths with CD. The higher costs of inpatient treatment in rural regions may indicate a need for alternative forms of service provision and delivery in rural settings.
对于有心理健康问题的儿童和青少年,关于居住地区类型(城市与农村)是否会影响受影响个体的医疗费用,目前缺乏相关数据。因此,本研究的目的是探讨患有品行障碍(CD)的儿童和青少年在城市与农村医疗费用方面的潜在差异,品行障碍是最常见且耗费成本的儿童和青少年精神疾病之一。此外,我们旨在比较患有CD的青少年与未患此诊断的青少年的医疗费用。
我们分析了一家德国健康保险公司的数据,提取了2011年所有被诊断患有CD的青少年(CD组;N = 6337),以及一个年龄和性别匹配的未患此诊断的组(对照组)。对于这两组,按居住地区(城市与农村)分层汇总了每人每年的门诊和住院医疗费用。
虽然CD组的年平均总费用在城市和农村居住地区之间没有显著差异(2785欧元对3557欧元,p = 0.253),但农村地区的住院治疗费用显著更高(2166欧元(占总费用的60.9%)对1199欧元(占总费用的43.1%),p < 0.0005)。对于门诊医疗费用,发现了相反的效果,居住在城市地区的个体费用显著更高(901欧元(占总费用的32.3%)对581欧元(占总费用的16.3%),p < 0.0005)。在对照组中,总体健康费用、住院或门诊费用在农村与城市之间均未发现显著差异。CD组的平均总费用比对照组高四倍(3162(±5934)欧元对795(±4425)欧元)。
本研究首次证明了患有CD的青少年在城市与农村医疗费用方面的差异。农村地区较高的住院治疗费用可能表明农村地区需要替代形式的服务提供和交付方式。