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Anaesth Crit Care Pain Med · Jun 2017
Evaluation of financial burden following complications after major surgery in France: Potential return after perioperative goal-directed therapy.
- Alain Landais, Morgane Morel, Jacques Goldstein, Jerôme Loriau, Annie Fresnel, Corinne Chevalier, Gilles Rejasse, Pascal Alfonsi, and Claude Ecoffey.
- Centre hospitalier d'Argenteuil, 95107 Argenteuil, France.
- Anaesth Crit Care Pain Med. 2017 Jun 1; 36 (3): 151-155.
ObjectivePerioperative goal-directed therapy (PGDT) has been demonstrated to improve postoperative outcomes and reduce the length of hospital stays. The objective of our analysis was to evaluate the cost of complications, derived from French hospital payments, and calculate the potential cost savings and length of hospital stay reductions.MethodsThe billing of 2388 patients who underwent scheduled high-risk surgery (i.e. major abdominal, gynaecologic, urological, vascular, and orthopaedic interventions) over three years was retrospectively collected from three French hospitals (one public-teaching, one public, and one private hospital). A relationship between mortality, length of hospital stays, cost/patient, and severity scores, based mainly on postoperative complications but also on preoperative clinical status, were analysed. Statistical analysis was performed using Student's t-tests or Wilcoxon tests.ResultsOur analyses determined that a severity score of 3 or 4 was associated with complications in 90% of cases and this represented 36% of patients who, compared with those with a score of 1 or 2, were associated with significantly increased costs (€ 8205±3335 to € 22,081±16,090; P<0.001, delta of € 13,876) and a prolonged length of hospital stay (mean of 10 to 27 days; P<0.001, delta of 17 days). According to estimates for complications avoided by PGDT, there was a projected reduction in average healthcare costs of between € 854 and € 1458 per patient and a reduction in total hospital bed days from 1755 to 4423 over three years. Based on French National data (47,000 high risk surgeries per year), the potential financial savings ranged from € 40M to € 68M, not including the costs of PGDT and its implementation.ConclusionOur analysis demonstrates that patients with complications are significantly more expensive to care for than those without complications. In our model, it was projected that implementing PGDT during high-risk surgery may significantly reduce healthcare costs and the length of hospital stays in France while probably improving patient access to care and reducing waiting times for procedures.Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.
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