Determining the economic cost of ICU treatment: a prospective “micro-costing” study.

Autor: McLaughlin, Anne Marie, Hardt, Judy, Canavan, James B., Donnelly, Maria B.
Předmět:
Zdroj: Intensive Care Medicine; Dec2009, Vol. 35 Issue 12, p2135-2140, 6p, 3 Charts, 2 Graphs
Abstrakt: To prospectively assess the cost of patients in an adult intensive care unit (ICU) using bottom-up costing methodology and evaluate the usefulness of “severity of illness” scores in estimating ICU cost. A prospective study costing 64 consecutive admissions over a 2-month period in a mixed medical/surgical ICU. The median daily ICU cost (interquartile range, IQR) was €2,205 (€1,932–€3,073), and the median total ICU cost (IQR) was €10,916 (€4,294–€24,091). ICU survivors had a lower median daily ICU cost at €2,164 per day, compared with €3,496 per day for ICU non-survivors ( P = 0.08). The requirements for continuous haemodiafiltration, blood products and anti-fungal agents were associated with higher daily and overall ICU costs ( P = 0.002). Each point increase in SAPS3 was associated with a €305 (95% CI €31–€579) increase in total ICU cost ( P = 0.029). However, SAPS3 accounted for a small proportion of the variance in this model ( R2 = 0.08), limiting its usefulness as a stand-alone predictor of cost in clinical practice. A model including haemodiafiltration, blood products and anti-fungal agents explained 54% of the variance in total ICU cost. This bottom-up costing study highlighted the considerable individual variation in costs between ICU patients and identified the major factors contributing to cost. As the requirement for expensive interventions was the main driver for ICU cost, “severity of illness” scores may not be useful as stand-alone predictors of cost in the ICU. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index