Ambrosio Art, Jeffery Diana D, Hopkins Laura, Burke Harry B
LCDR, Department of Defense, U.S. Navy Medical Corps, Naval Medical Center San Diego, Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton, CA.
Department of Defense, Defense Health Agency, Clinical Support Division, 7700 Arlington Boulevard, DHHQ, MS 5140, Falls Church, VA.
Mil Med. 2019 May 1;184(5-6):e400-e407. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usy192.
Examining costs and utilization in a single-payer universal health care system provides information on fiscal and resource burdens associated with head and neck cancer (HNC). Here, we examine trends in the Department of Defense (DoD) HNC population with respect to: (1) reimbursed annual costs and (2) patterns and predictors of health care utilization in military only, civilian only, and both systems of care (mixed model).
A retrospective, cross-sectional study was conducted using TRICARE claims data from fiscal years 2007 through 2014 for reimbursement of ambulatory, inpatient, and pharmacy charges. The study was approved by the Defense Health Agency Office of Privacy and Civil Liberties as exempt from institutional review board full review. The population was all beneficiaries, age 18-64, with a primary ICD-9 diagnosis of HNC, on average, 2,944 HNC cases per year. The outcomes of regression models were total reimbursed health care cost, and counts of ambulatory visits, hospitalizations, and bed days. The predictors were fiscal year, demographic variables, hospice use, type and geographic region of TRICARE enrollment, use of military or civilian care or mixed use, cancer treatment modalities, the number of physical and mental health comorbid conditions, and tobacco use. A priori, null hypotheses were assumed.
Per annual average, 61% of the HNC population was age 55-64, and 69% were males. About 6% accessed military facilities only for all health care, 60% accessed civilian only, and 34% accessed both military and civilian facilities. Patients who only accessed military care had earlier stage disease as indicated by rates of single modality treatment and hospice use; military care only and mixed use had similar rates of combination treatment and hospice use. The average cost per patient per year was $14,050 for civilian care only, $13,036 for military care only, and $29,338 for mixed use of both systems. The strongest predictors of higher cost were chemotherapy, radiation therapy, head and neck surgery, hospice care, and mixed-use care. The strongest predictors of health care utilization were chemotherapy, use of hospice, the number of physical and mental health comorbidities, radiation therapy, head and neck surgery, and system of care.
To a single payer, the use of a single system of care exclusively among HNC patients is more cost-effective than use of a mixed-use system. The results suggest an over-utilization of ambulatory care services when both military and civilian care are accessed. Further investigation is needed to assess coordination between systems of care and improved efficiencies with respect to the cost and apparent over-utilization of health care services.
在单一支付者全民医疗保健系统中研究成本和利用情况,可为头颈部癌(HNC)相关的财政和资源负担提供信息。在此,我们研究了美国国防部(DoD)HNC患者群体在以下方面的趋势:(1)年度报销成本,以及(2)仅在军事医疗系统、仅在民用医疗系统以及两个医疗系统都使用(混合模式)的医疗保健利用模式和预测因素。
使用2007财年至2014财年的TRICARE理赔数据进行了一项回顾性横断面研究,以报销门诊、住院和药房费用。该研究经国防卫生局隐私与公民自由办公室批准,免于机构审查委员会的全面审查。研究对象为所有年龄在18 - 64岁、主要ICD - 9诊断为HNC的受益人,平均每年有2944例HNC病例。回归模型的结果是医疗保健总报销成本、门诊就诊次数、住院次数和住院天数。预测因素包括财政年度、人口统计学变量、临终关怀使用情况、TRICARE参保类型和地理区域、军事或民用医疗的使用或混合使用、癌症治疗方式、身心健康合并症数量以及烟草使用情况。预先假定了零假设。
每年平均而言,61%的HNC患者年龄在55 - 64岁之间,69%为男性。约6%的患者仅在军事设施接受所有医疗保健,60%仅在民用设施接受治疗,34%同时在军事和民用设施接受治疗。仅接受军事医疗的患者疾病分期较早,这可从单一治疗方式和临终关怀使用比例看出;仅接受军事医疗和混合使用的患者联合治疗和临终关怀使用比例相似。仅使用民用医疗时,每位患者每年的平均成本为14,050美元,仅使用军事医疗时为13,036美元,两个系统混合使用时为29,338美元。成本较高的最强预测因素是化疗、放疗、头颈部手术、临终关怀护理和混合使用护理。医疗保健利用的最强预测因素是化疗、临终关怀使用、身心健康合并症数量、放疗、头颈部手术和医疗系统。
对于单一支付者而言,在HNC患者中仅使用单一医疗系统比使用混合系统更具成本效益。结果表明,当同时使用军事和民用医疗时,门诊护理服务存在过度利用的情况。需要进一步调查以评估医疗系统之间的协调情况,并提高医疗保健服务成本和明显过度利用方面的效率。