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Health Economic Challenge: Geriatric Trauma—An Age-Based Observational Analysis of Treatment Costs and Reimbursement Issues

Demographic change is having a major impact on the economic and structural development of the healthcare system. People stay active longer and the number of mild traumatic brain injury [mTBI] in patients ≥ 65 years of age consequently increases. The aim of this comparative analysis is to illustrate...

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Autores principales: Schindler, Cora Rebecca, Woschek, Mathias, Mühlenfeld, Nils, Seifert, Lukas, Marzi, Ingo, Störmann, Philipp, Verboket, René Danilo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9323715/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35886122
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19148270
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author Schindler, Cora Rebecca
Woschek, Mathias
Mühlenfeld, Nils
Seifert, Lukas
Marzi, Ingo
Störmann, Philipp
Verboket, René Danilo
author_facet Schindler, Cora Rebecca
Woschek, Mathias
Mühlenfeld, Nils
Seifert, Lukas
Marzi, Ingo
Störmann, Philipp
Verboket, René Danilo
author_sort Schindler, Cora Rebecca
collection PubMed
description Demographic change is having a major impact on the economic and structural development of the healthcare system. People stay active longer and the number of mild traumatic brain injury [mTBI] in patients ≥ 65 years of age consequently increases. The aim of this comparative analysis is to illustrate the impact of demographic change and the increasing treatment of geriatric trauma patients on the cost structure of the health care system using mTBI as an example diagnosis. Patients and Methods: The 12-month retrospective analysis included 220 in-patients treated with mTBI and remunerated under the German Diagnosis Related Group [G-DRG] B80Z. For comparative analysis, the patient population was divided into two study groups according to age [U65 18–64 years, G65 ≥ 65 years]. For the cost and proceeds calculation, itemized cost reports (personnel, supply, material, and equipment costs, etc.) were created. Results: 163 patients U65 and 57 patients G65 were included. In the G65 group, the most frequent accident mechanism was a fall from a short distance (84.1 vs. U65 36.7%; p = 0.007). For the inpatient admission of G65, the use of anticoagulants (p < 0.001) and comorbidity (p = 0.002) played a primary role, while for younger patients it was more neurological symptoms (p < 0.001) and alcohol (p < 0.001) that led to inpatient monitoring. The mean length of hospitalization of G65 patients was significantly longer than that of younger patients (G65 2.4 ± 1.9 days > U65 1.7 ± 0.8 days; p = 0.007) and radiological examinations (G65 94.7% > U65 23.3%; p = 0.013) were performed more frequently. Comparing analysis of the cost and proceeds of U65 vs. G65 results in a proceeds difference of €51,753.91 per year for the G-DRG B80Z compared to U65. Conclusions: It has been shown that there is a difference in costs and proceeds when comparing younger and older patients, resulting in a reimbursement deficit. In view of the demographic development in Europe, flat-rate remuneration will lead to a considerable discrepancy between DRG reimbursement and the coverage of hospitals’ running costs. Providing health care to an increasingly aging society represents one of the major personnel and financial challenges for the public health system in the coming decades. Further adaptation of the DRG system to the growing costs caused by older patients is imperative.
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spelling pubmed-93237152022-07-27 Health Economic Challenge: Geriatric Trauma—An Age-Based Observational Analysis of Treatment Costs and Reimbursement Issues Schindler, Cora Rebecca Woschek, Mathias Mühlenfeld, Nils Seifert, Lukas Marzi, Ingo Störmann, Philipp Verboket, René Danilo Int J Environ Res Public Health Article Demographic change is having a major impact on the economic and structural development of the healthcare system. People stay active longer and the number of mild traumatic brain injury [mTBI] in patients ≥ 65 years of age consequently increases. The aim of this comparative analysis is to illustrate the impact of demographic change and the increasing treatment of geriatric trauma patients on the cost structure of the health care system using mTBI as an example diagnosis. Patients and Methods: The 12-month retrospective analysis included 220 in-patients treated with mTBI and remunerated under the German Diagnosis Related Group [G-DRG] B80Z. For comparative analysis, the patient population was divided into two study groups according to age [U65 18–64 years, G65 ≥ 65 years]. For the cost and proceeds calculation, itemized cost reports (personnel, supply, material, and equipment costs, etc.) were created. Results: 163 patients U65 and 57 patients G65 were included. In the G65 group, the most frequent accident mechanism was a fall from a short distance (84.1 vs. U65 36.7%; p = 0.007). For the inpatient admission of G65, the use of anticoagulants (p < 0.001) and comorbidity (p = 0.002) played a primary role, while for younger patients it was more neurological symptoms (p < 0.001) and alcohol (p < 0.001) that led to inpatient monitoring. The mean length of hospitalization of G65 patients was significantly longer than that of younger patients (G65 2.4 ± 1.9 days > U65 1.7 ± 0.8 days; p = 0.007) and radiological examinations (G65 94.7% > U65 23.3%; p = 0.013) were performed more frequently. Comparing analysis of the cost and proceeds of U65 vs. G65 results in a proceeds difference of €51,753.91 per year for the G-DRG B80Z compared to U65. Conclusions: It has been shown that there is a difference in costs and proceeds when comparing younger and older patients, resulting in a reimbursement deficit. In view of the demographic development in Europe, flat-rate remuneration will lead to a considerable discrepancy between DRG reimbursement and the coverage of hospitals’ running costs. Providing health care to an increasingly aging society represents one of the major personnel and financial challenges for the public health system in the coming decades. Further adaptation of the DRG system to the growing costs caused by older patients is imperative. MDPI 2022-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9323715/ /pubmed/35886122 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19148270 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Schindler, Cora Rebecca
Woschek, Mathias
Mühlenfeld, Nils
Seifert, Lukas
Marzi, Ingo
Störmann, Philipp
Verboket, René Danilo
Health Economic Challenge: Geriatric Trauma—An Age-Based Observational Analysis of Treatment Costs and Reimbursement Issues
title Health Economic Challenge: Geriatric Trauma—An Age-Based Observational Analysis of Treatment Costs and Reimbursement Issues
title_full Health Economic Challenge: Geriatric Trauma—An Age-Based Observational Analysis of Treatment Costs and Reimbursement Issues
title_fullStr Health Economic Challenge: Geriatric Trauma—An Age-Based Observational Analysis of Treatment Costs and Reimbursement Issues
title_full_unstemmed Health Economic Challenge: Geriatric Trauma—An Age-Based Observational Analysis of Treatment Costs and Reimbursement Issues
title_short Health Economic Challenge: Geriatric Trauma—An Age-Based Observational Analysis of Treatment Costs and Reimbursement Issues
title_sort health economic challenge: geriatric trauma—an age-based observational analysis of treatment costs and reimbursement issues
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9323715/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35886122
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19148270
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