The financial costs of hospital care for people with diabetes who have single and multiple macrovascular complications

Aim: To evaluate the impact on hospital costs of patients being diagnosed with multiple complications of diabetes. Methods: All inpatient admissions and outpatient appointments from the Cardiff and Vale of Glamorgan area (1996 onwards) were cross-referenced to the diabetes register. Each episode of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Diabetes research and clinical practice 2005-02, Vol.67 (2), p.144-151
Hauptverfasser: Currie, Craig J., Morgan, Christopher Ll, Dixon, Simon, McEwan, Phil, Marchant, Nick, Bearne, Andy, Sharplin, Peter, Peters, John R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aim: To evaluate the impact on hospital costs of patients being diagnosed with multiple complications of diabetes. Methods: All inpatient admissions and outpatient appointments from the Cardiff and Vale of Glamorgan area (1996 onwards) were cross-referenced to the diabetes register. Each episode of inpatient care was coded using Healthcare Resource Group (HRG) grouper software. The allocated HRG-coded episode was linked to a series of elective and emergency reference costs from the National Health Service costing manual. Outpatient appointments were cost-coded using the mean reference costs by specialty. Non-psychiatric finished consultant episodes (FCEs) were used rather than admissions to report inpatient utilisation. Results: Overall, 2815 of the total 10,287 patients identified as inpatients had at least one admission; 6133 admissions (finished consultant episodes) were successfully grouped to give a total estimated cost of £7,373,539. An incremental, linear relationship was observed in the cost increases for each additional diagnosed complication. Mean annual inpatient age-standardised costs were £434 for no complications, £999 for one complication, £1,641 for two, and £2,462 for three. There were 5717 patients with diabetes who attended 25,334 outpatient appointments. The estimated cost for these outpatient appointments was £1,833,232. Conclusion: Minimising the number of complications in patients with diabetes would result in considerable cost offsets.
ISSN:0168-8227
1872-8227
DOI:10.1016/j.diabres.2004.01.002