Sauriasari Rani, Yunir Em, Saptaningsih Agusdini Banun
Faculty of Pharmacy, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, 16424, West Java, Indonesia.
Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universitas Jambi, Jambi, 36124, Indonesia.
Heliyon. 2024 Dec 14;11(2):e41263. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e41263. eCollection 2025 Jan 30.
To determine the in-hospital costs of patients with diabetic foot problems who either require or do not require amputation.
We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study of 213 subjects with low, moderate and high ulcer grades from January 2019 to December 2022 at a national referral hospital in Jakarta, Indonesia. Data were taken from the medical admissions record unit, electronic health records (EHR), hospital integrated system (HIS) and the foot registry system in the metabolic endocrine division, in relation to diabetic foot infection (DFI) as the primary or secondary diagnosis. We analysed data referring to patient characteristics, in-hospital costs and length of stay (LOS), with further comparison based on amputation status.
The total DFI costs were estimated at IDR 13.833 billion (median IDR 51.225 [min - max; 10.309-507.281) million]). The total costs were estimated at IDR 64.95 ± 50.89 million per patient. All cost variables were driven by intervention costs estimated at IDR 5.176 billion (median IDR 19.676 [min - max; 1.245-136.348) million per patient). Daily costs were IDR 3.281 million per patient per day. The total treatment costs for amputation and non-amputation were IDR 6.99 billion (median IDR 61.398 (18.785-268.768) million) and IDR 6.842 billion (median IDR 45.016 (10.309-507.282) million, respectively. The average LOS was 19.79 ± 10.77 days per DFI episode, which did not differ significantly between the amputation and non-amputation groups (p > 0.176) but not for total costs (p < 0.003). DFI is associated with high costs and long-term hospital stays.
Our study provides evidence on in-patient hospital costs by capturing the real costs of DFI treatment, with the total treatment costs for amputation being higher than for non-amputation. This information might benefit for health practitioners in clinical practice improvements and policy adjustments, including INA-CBGs tariff for DFI patients.
确定需要或不需要截肢的糖尿病足问题患者的住院费用。
我们于2019年1月至2022年12月在印度尼西亚雅加达的一家国家级转诊医院对213名溃疡分级为低、中、高的受试者进行了一项回顾性横断面研究。数据取自医疗入院记录部门、电子健康记录(EHR)、医院综合系统(HIS)以及代谢内分泌科的足部登记系统,以糖尿病足感染(DFI)作为主要或次要诊断。我们分析了与患者特征、住院费用和住院时间(LOS)相关的数据,并根据截肢状态进行了进一步比较。
DFI的总费用估计为1383.3亿印尼盾(中位数为5122.5万印尼盾[最小值 - 最大值;1030.9 - 50728.1万印尼盾])。每位患者的总费用估计为6495±5089万印尼盾。所有成本变量均由干预成本驱动,干预成本估计为51.76亿印尼盾(每位患者中位数为1967.6万印尼盾[最小值 - 最大值;124.5 - 13634.8万印尼盾])。每日费用为每位患者每天328.1万印尼盾。截肢和非截肢的总治疗费用分别为69.9亿印尼盾(中位数为6139.8万印尼盾[1878.5 - 26876.8万印尼盾])和68.42亿印尼盾(中位数为4501.6万印尼盾[1030.9 - 50728.2万印尼盾])。每次DFI发作的平均住院时间为19.79±10.77天,截肢组和非截肢组之间无显著差异(p>0.176),但总费用有差异(p<0.003)。DFI与高成本和长期住院相关。
我们的研究通过获取DFI治疗的实际成本,提供了住院费用的证据,截肢的总治疗费用高于非截肢。这些信息可能有助于临床医生改进临床实践和进行政策调整,包括为DFI患者制定INA - CBGs收费标准。