Quantifying the real-world cost saving from using surgical adjuncts to prevent complications during cataract surgery
Autor: | Aaron Jamison, David Lockington, Larry Benjamin |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Total cost medicine.medical_treatment Vitrectomy Cataract Extraction Article Surgical Equipment 03 medical and health sciences Indirect costs 0302 clinical medicine Cost Savings Humans Medicine 030212 general & internal medicine Intraoperative Complications Activity-based costing Intensive care medicine health care economics and organizations Surgical complication business.industry Vitreous loss Cataract surgery United Kingdom Cost savings Ophthalmology Models Economic 030221 ophthalmology & optometry business |
Zdroj: | Eye. 32:1530-1536 |
ISSN: | 1476-5454 0950-222X |
Popis: | INTRODUCTION: Surgical adjuncts in cataract surgery are often perceived as sometimes necessary, always expensive, particularly in the “lean” cost-saving era. However, prevention of a surgical complication, rather than subsequent management, should always be the preferred strategy. We wished to model real-world costs associated with surgical adjuncts use and test the maxim for cataract surgery—“if you think of it, use it”. METHODS: We compared UK list prices for equipment and related costs of preventing vitreous loss (VL) via use of surgical adjuncts vs its subsequent management in a hypothetical cataract surgery scenario of a white swollen cataract with a moderately dilated pupil. RESULTS: The original surgery costs for the “cautious with adjuncts, no complications” approach was £943.54, including adjuncts costing £137.47. In the “minimalist, no adjunct” scenario, management of VL using the Anterior Vitrectomy Kit cost £142.45, and additional management and follow-up costs resulted in total cost of £1178.20 (£234.66 (25%) more expensive). If left aphakic, an additional operation for secondary iris clip IOL insertion and further follow-up to address the impact of the complication ultimately cost £2124.67 overall. An additional initial spend on surgical adjuncts of £137.47 could potentially prevent £1293.60 (9× increase) in direct costs in this scenario. CONCLUSIONS: Through simple scenario modelling, we have demonstrated the cost benefits provided by the use of precautionary surgical adjuncts during cataract surgery. VL costs significantly more in terms of complication management and follow-up. This supports the cataract surgeon’s maxim—“if you think of it, use it”. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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