Changes in medical costs for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis over the past 15 years

Use of instrumentation has become widespread in spinal surgery due to intraoperative spinal cord monitoring, navigation, and improvement and development of implant materials. However, recent advances in spine surgery may have also led to an increase in medical costs. The purpose of this study is to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nagoya journal of medical science 2023-05, Vol.85 (2), p.333-342
Hauptverfasser: Kobayashi, Kazuyoshi, Sato, Koji, Ando, Toshihiro, Imagama, Shiro
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Use of instrumentation has become widespread in spinal surgery due to intraoperative spinal cord monitoring, navigation, and improvement and development of implant materials. However, recent advances in spine surgery may have also led to an increase in medical costs. The purpose of this study is to investigate the trends of operative resource utilization and the costs of surgery for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) over 15 years. Surgery for AIS was performed for 118 patients from January 2004 to December 2019 at national University Hospital. Trends were examined through retrospective calculation of the costs for outpatient, inpatient, and surgical services, and changes over time and the characteristics of fees were examined. Differences between groups were analyzed by Mann-Whitney U test and Student t-test. During the 15-year period, the length of hospital stay decreased, but costs for scoliosis surgery increased by 1.6 times and the total cost increased by 1.3 times. The fee for intensive care per day per person increased by 1.5 times. There were slight increases in MRI and CT fees, but no changes in fees for radiography, rehabilitation, subsequent visits, and prescriptions. New charges for medical supervision, medical clerk support, medical safety measures, and prevention of infection were added at different times during the 15-year period. Itemized costs related to surgery have increased with technological advances. Although these results only show changes in costs for AIS surgery, the findings indicate the challenges faced by the healthcare economy and the need for spine surgeons to understand medical costs.
ISSN:0027-7622
2186-3326
DOI:10.18999/nagjms.85.2.333