Walsh Mary E, Sorensen Jan, Galvin Rose, Williams David Jp, Harbison Joseph A, Murphy Sean, Collins Ronan, McCabe Dominick Jh, Crowe Morgan, Horgan N Frances
School of Physiotherapy, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
HRB Centre for Primary Care Research, Department of General Practice, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
Eur Stroke J. 2018 Sep;3(3):254-262. doi: 10.1177/2396987318764954. Epub 2018 Mar 15.
Falls are common post-stroke events but their relationship with healthcare costs is unclear. The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between healthcare costs in the first year after stroke and falls among survivors discharged to the community.
Survivors of acute stroke with planned home discharges from five large hospitals in Ireland were recruited. Falls and healthcare utilisation data were recorded using inpatient records, monthly calendars and post-discharge interviews. Cost of stroke was estimated for each participant from hospital admission for one year. The association of fall-status with overall cost was tested with multivariable linear regression analysis adjusting for pre-stroke function, stroke severity, age and living situation.
A total of 109 stroke survivors with complete follow-up data (mean age = 68.5 years (SD = 13.5 years)) were included. Fifty-three participants (49%) fell following stroke, of whom 28 (26%) had recurrent falls. Estimated mean total healthcare cost was €20,244 (SD=€23,456). The experience of one fall and recurrent falls was independently associated with higher costs of care (p = 0.02 and p < 0.01, respectively).
The observed relationship between falls and cost is likely to be underestimated as aids and adaptions, productivity losses, and nursing home care were not included.
This study points at differences across fall-status in several healthcare costs categories, namely the index admission, secondary/tertiary care (including inpatient re-admissions) and allied healthcare. Future research could compare the cost-effectiveness of inpatient versus community-based fall-prevention after stroke. Further studies are also required to inform post-stroke bone-health management and fracture-risk reduction.
跌倒在中风后很常见,但它们与医疗费用之间的关系尚不清楚。本研究的目的是探讨中风后第一年社区出院幸存者的医疗费用与跌倒之间的关系。
招募了爱尔兰五家大型医院计划出院的急性中风幸存者。使用住院记录、月度日历和出院后访谈记录跌倒和医疗服务利用数据。从住院一年开始估算每位参与者的中风费用。通过多变量线性回归分析检验跌倒状态与总成本的关联,并对中风前功能、中风严重程度、年龄和生活状况进行调整。
共纳入109例有完整随访数据的中风幸存者(平均年龄 = 68.5岁(标准差 = 13.5岁))。53名参与者(49%)中风后跌倒,其中28名(26%)反复跌倒。估计平均总医疗费用为20244欧元(标准差 = 23456欧元)。跌倒一次和反复跌倒的经历分别与更高的护理费用独立相关(p = 0.02和p < 0.01)。
由于未包括辅助器具和适应性设备、生产力损失和养老院护理,跌倒与费用之间观察到的关系可能被低估。
本研究指出了不同跌倒状态在几个医疗费用类别上的差异,即首次住院、二级/三级护理(包括住院再入院)和联合医疗保健。未来的研究可以比较中风后住院与社区预防跌倒的成本效益。还需要进一步的研究来为中风后骨骼健康管理和降低骨折风险提供信息。