Mahomed S, Mahomed O H
School of Laboratory Medicine and Medical Sciences, College of Health Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa.
S Afr Med J. 2018 Dec 13;109(1):35-39. doi: 10.7196/SAMJ.2018.v109i1.13268.
Intensive care services are one of the largest cost drivers in a hospital. Increasing life expectancy and comorbidities have resulted in an increased need for intensive care beds.
To conduct a cost analysis of intensive care services at a central hospital in the public sector in South Africa (SA).
A retrospective cost analysis for the 2015/16 financial year was conducted across two intensive care units (ICUs), a trauma ICU (10 beds) and a combined ICU for neurosurgery, medicine and surgery (18 beds). A mixed-methods costing approach was used based on the availability of data. The bottom-up approach was used to calculate the cost of clinical support, pharmaceuticals, consumables and human resources. The top-down approach was used to allocate the cost of equipment and goods and services.
There were 544 admissions resulting in 4 987 inpatient days during the study period. The total estimated inpatient cost across the two ICUs was ZAR114 055 104, with a cost per patient day of ZAR22 870. The combined ICU cost per patient day was 58% higher than the cost per patient day in the trauma ICU (ZAR26 954 v. ZAR17 021). The mean cost per admission was ZAR157 883 in the trauma ICU and ZAR245 087 in the combined ICU. Human resources costs were the highest ICU cost driver (55%), followed by direct patient activity costs (medical consumables, pharmaceuticals, laboratory tests, radiology and blood products), which contributed 24%.
This is the first reported cost analysis of intensive care services in SA. Our cost per patient day was higher than that reported in other lower-income countries, but lower than that in high-income countries. These costs vary owing to the different types of ICUs, wide spectrum of disease presentation and availability of diagnostic and treatment options. This study provides useful data that could assist in the planning and provision of intensive care services.
重症监护服务是医院最大的成本驱动因素之一。预期寿命的延长和合并症的增加导致对重症监护病床的需求增加。
对南非(SA)公共部门一家中心医院的重症监护服务进行成本分析。
对2015/16财政年度进行回顾性成本分析,涉及两个重症监护病房(ICU),一个创伤ICU(10张床位)和一个神经外科、内科和外科联合ICU(18张床位)。根据数据可用性采用混合方法成本核算方法。自下而上的方法用于计算临床支持、药品、耗材和人力资源的成本。自上而下的方法用于分配设备以及商品和服务的成本。
在研究期间,共有544例入院病例,住院天数达4987天。两个ICU的估计住院总成本为114,055,104南非兰特,每位患者每天的成本为22,870南非兰特。联合ICU每位患者每天的成本比创伤ICU每位患者每天的成本高58%(26,954南非兰特对17,021南非兰特)。创伤ICU每次入院的平均成本为157,883南非兰特,联合ICU为245,087南非兰特。人力资源成本是ICU最高的成本驱动因素(55%),其次是直接患者活动成本(医疗耗材、药品、实验室检查、放射学和血液制品),占24%。
这是南非首次报道的重症监护服务成本分析。我们每位患者每天的成本高于其他低收入国家报道的成本,但低于高收入国家。这些成本因ICU类型不同、疾病表现范围广泛以及诊断和治疗选择的可用性而异。本研究提供了有助于规划和提供重症监护服务的有用数据。