A staged management diabetes foot program versus standard care: a 1-year cost and utilization comparison in a state public hospital system11No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit upon the authors(s) or upon any organization with which the author(s) is/are associated

Autor: James A. Birke, Ronald Horswell, Charles A. Patout
Rok vydání: 2003
Předmět:
Zdroj: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 84:1743-1746
ISSN: 0003-9993
DOI: 10.1016/s0003-9993(03)00477-5
Popis: Horswell RL, Birke JA, Patout CA Jr. A staged management diabetes foot program versus standard care: a 1-year cost and utilization comparison in a state public hospital system. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2003;84:1743–6. Objective To determine whether staged management of foot ulcers reduces health care costs and utilization. Design Nonrandomized retrospective study using data from 1998–1999 in the Louisiana public hospital system. Setting Louisiana public hospital system. Participants Forty-five patients with diabetes foot ulcer who received staged management foot care and 169 patients with diabetes foot ulcer who received standard foot care. Interventions Staged management of foot ulcers consisting of devices to offload pressure; self-care education; and, after healing, custom-fabricated orthoses and footwear, and monitored progressive ambulation. Main outcome measures One-year levels of the number of foot-related inpatient hospitalizations, number of amputation-related hospitalizations, total number of foot-related inpatient days, total charges for foot-related inpatient hospitalizations, all-cause outpatient visits, total charges for all-cause outpatient visits, and combined outpatient and foot-related inpatient charges. Results Over the 12-month study period, the staged management group had a lower foot-related hospitalization rate than did the comparison group (.09 admissions per person vs .50 admissions per person, P =.0002); lower foot-related inpatient days (.91d per person vs 3.97d per person, P =.0289); lower foot-related inpatient charges ($1321 per person vs $5411 per person, P =.0151); fewer amputation-related hospitalizations (.04 per person vs .19 per person, P =.0351); fewer emergency department visits (.60 visits per person vs 1.22 visits per person, P =.0043); lower emergency department charges ($104 per person vs $208 per person, P =.0057); and lower total charges ($4776 per person vs $9402 per person, P =.0141). The staged management group had a higher number of outpatient visits (24.91 per person vs 8.04 per person, P P Conclusions A staged management diabetes foot program significantly reduced emergency department and hospital utilization and charges in a statewide public hospital system.
Databáze: OpenAIRE