Department of Health Systems Management, Rush University, Chicago, IL, United States of America.
RUSH BMO Institute for Health Equity, Rush University, Chicago, IL, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Oct 14;19(10):e0309159. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0309159. eCollection 2024.
Although studies have evaluated the hospital cost of care associated with treating patients with COVID-19, there are no studies that compare the hospital cost of care among racial and ethnic groups based on detailed cost accounting data. The aims of this study were to provide a detailed description of the hospital costs of COVID-19 based on individual resources during the hospital stay and standardized costs that do not rely on inflation adjustment and evaluate the extent to which hospital total cost of care for patients with COVID-19 differs by race and ethnicity.
This study used electronic medical record data from an urban academic medical center in Chicago, Illinois USA. Hospital cost of care was calculated using accounting data representing the cost of the resources used to the hospital (i.e., cost to the hospital, not payments). A multivariable generalized linear model with a log link function and inverse gaussian distribution family was used to calculate the average marginal effect (AME) for Black, White, and Hispanic patients. A second regression model further compared Hispanic patients by preferred language (English versus Spanish).
In our sample of 1,853 patients, the average adjusted cost of care was significantly lower for Black compared to White patients (AME = -$5,606; 95% confidence interval (CI), -$10,711 to -$501), and Hispanic patients had higher cost of care compared to White patients (AME = $8,539, 95% CI, $3,963 to $13,115). In addition, Hispanic patients who preferred Spanish had significantly higher cost than Hispanic patients who preferred English (AME = $11,866; 95% CI $5,302 to $18,431).
Total cost of care takes into account both the intensity of the treatment as well as the duration of the hospital stay. Thus, policy makers and health systems can use cost of care as a proxy for severity, especially when looking at the disparities among different race and ethnicity groups.
尽管已有研究评估了与治疗 COVID-19 患者相关的护理医院成本,但尚无研究根据详细的成本核算数据比较不同种族和族裔群体的护理医院成本。本研究旨在根据患者住院期间的个体资源提供 COVID-19 医院成本的详细描述,并提供不依赖于通胀调整的标准化成本,并评估 COVID-19 患者的护理总成本在多大程度上因种族和族裔而异。
本研究使用了来自美国伊利诺伊州芝加哥市的一家城市学术医疗中心的电子病历数据。使用代表医院使用资源成本的会计数据(即医院成本,而非付款)来计算护理成本。采用具有对数链接函数和逆高斯分布族的多变量广义线性模型,计算黑种人、白种人和西班牙裔患者的平均边际效应(AME)。第二个回归模型进一步比较了讲西班牙语和讲英语的西班牙裔患者。
在我们的 1853 名患者样本中,与白种人患者相比,黑种人患者的护理成本调整后平均值明显更低(AME=-$5606;95%置信区间(CI),-$10711 至 -$501),西班牙裔患者的护理成本明显高于白种人患者(AME=$8539;95%CI,$3963 至 $13115)。此外,与讲英语的西班牙裔患者相比,讲西班牙语的西班牙裔患者的成本明显更高(AME=$11866;95%CI,$5302 至 $18431)。
总成本既考虑了治疗的强度,又考虑了住院时间的长短。因此,政策制定者和医疗系统可以将护理成本作为严重程度的代理指标,尤其是在研究不同种族和族裔群体之间的差异时。