• J Opioid Manag · Nov 2014

    Multicenter Study

    Activity-based cost analysis of opioid-related nausea and vomiting among inpatients.

    • Leopold Eberhart, Tilo Koch, Peter Kranke, Dirk Rüsch, Alexander Torossian, and Stefan Nardi-Hiebl.
    • Department of Anesthesiology & Intensive Care Medicine, Philipps-University Marburg, Marburg, Germany.
    • J Opioid Manag. 2014 Nov 1; 10 (6): 415-22.

    ObjectiveNausea and/or vomiting (N/V) are frequent side effects of opioid drugs. These are of major concerns to patients and caregivers and only few studies have focused on their economical costs.DesignThis is a prospective, nonproduct-related, activity-based evaluation of personnel and material costs of opioid-related N/V among inpatients.SettingData were obtained from surgical, general medicine, and palliative care wards at 16 German hospitals of different size, healthcare mandate, and ownership.Patients, ParticipantsAccording to predefined criteria, of 462 documented N/V events, 340 were diagnosed as opioid related.InterventionsElicited activities and pharmacological interventions for N/V episodes followed local standards.Main Outcome MeasureBoth materials used and the time engaged to treat patients with N/V were documented on an "ad hoc" activity recording form. The total cost of an opioid-related N/V episode was calculated based on standard wages of the involved personnel and standard costs of the inherent materials used.ResultsMean staff tenure time for handling an episode of N/V was 26.2 ± 19.8 minutes (nausea 16.9 ± 28.7 minutes; nausea + vomiting: 33.4 ± 26.8 minutes). In the German context, this corresponds to average personnel costs of €18.06 ± 13.64. Material cost contributes to another €13.49 ±13.38 of costs mainly depending on acquisition costs of antiemetic drugs.ConclusionsN/V showed to have impact on workload of nurses and (to lesser extent) physicians and economic burden of €31 ± 22 for each N/V episode. In view of these results, the potential costs of strategies to minimize the incidence of N/V (use of antiemetics and/or the use of new analgesics) should be outweighed against the incurred costs of N/V.

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