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Cardoen_B_SPINE_Variability in ...
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Jacobs, KarelDewilde, Thibault
Vandoren, Cindy
Cardoen, Brecht
Vansteenkiste, Nancy
Scheys, Lennart
Roodhooft, Filip
Moke, Lieven
Kesteloot, Katrien
Publication Year
2020Journal
SpinePublication Volume
45Publication Issue
17Publication Begin page
1221Publication End page
1228
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Objective: To calculate the total clinical hospital cost of the Adult Spinal Deformity (ASD) care trajectory, to explain cost variability by patient and surgery characteristics, and to identify areas of process improvement opportunities. Summary of background data: ASD is associated with a high financial and clinical burden on society. ASD care thus requires improved insights in costs and its drivers as a critical step toward the improvement of value, i.e., the ratio between delivered health outcome and associated costs. Methods: Patient characteristics and surgical variables were collected following ethical approval in a cohort of 139 ASD patients, treated between December, 2014 and January, 2018. Clinical hospital costs were calculated, including all care activities, from initial consultation to 1 year after initial surgery (excl. overhead) in a university hospital setting. Multiple linear regression analysis was performed to analyze the impact of patient and surgical characteristics on clinical costs. Results: 75.5% of the total clinical hospital cost (€27,865) was incurred during initial surgery with costs related to the operating theatre (80.3%), nursing units (11.9%), and intensive care (2.9%) being the largest contributors. 57.5% of the variation in total cost could be explained in order of importance by surgical invasiveness, age, coronary disease, single or multiple-staged surgery, and mobility status. Revision surgery, unplanned surgery due to complications, was found to increase average costs by 87.6% compared with elective surgeries (€ 44,907 (± € 23,429) vs. € 23,944 (± € 7302)). Conclusion: This study identified opportunities for process improvement by calculating the total clinical hospital costs. In addition, it identified patient and treatment characteristics that predict 57.5% of cost variation, which could be taken into account when developing a payment system. Future research should include outcome data to assess variation in value.Knowledge Domain/Industry
Accounting & FinanceOperations & Supply Chain Management
ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1097/BRS.0000000000003497
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