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In-Hospital Healthcare Utilization, Outcomes, and Costs in Pre-Hospital-Adjudicated Low-Risk Chest-Pain Patients

Authors :
Aize van der Sluis
Erik A Badings
Dominique N van Dongen
Arnoud W J van 't Hof
Marion J Fokkert
Robbert J. Slingerland
Rudolf T Tolsma
Jan Paul Ottervanger
Cardiologie
MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Cardiologie (9)
RS: Carim - H01 Clinical atrial fibrillation
RS: CARIM - R2.01 - Clinical atrial fibrillation
Source :
Applied Health Economics and Health Policy, 17(6), 875-882. Adis International Ltd
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Adis International Ltd, 2019.

Abstract

There is increasing evidence that in patients presenting with acute chest pain, pre-hospital triage can accurately identify low-risk patients. It is, however, still unclear which diagnostics are performed in pre-hospital-adjudicated low-risk patients and what the contribution is of those diagnostic results in the healthcare process. The aim of this study was to quantify healthcare utilization, costs, and outcomes in pre-hospital-adjudicated low-risk chest-pain patients, and to extrapolate to total costs in the Netherlands. This was a prospective cohort study including 700 patients with suspected non-ST-elevation acute coronary syndrome in which pre-hospital risk stratification using the HEART score was performed by paramedics. Low risk was defined as a pre-hospital HEART score ≤ 3. Data on (results of) hospital diagnostics, costs, and discharge diagnosis were collected. A total of 172 (25%) patients were considered as low risk. Of these low-risk patients, the mean age was 54 years, 52% were male, and 84% of patients were discharged within 12 h. Repeated electrocardiography and routine laboratory measurements, including cardiac markers, were performed in all patients. Chest X-ray was performed in 61% and echocardiography in 11% of patients. After additional diagnostics, two patients (1.2%) were diagnosed as non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction and two patients (1.2%) as unstable angina. Other diagnoses were atrial fibrillation (n = 1) and acute pancreatitis/cholecystitis (n = 2); all other patients had non-specific/non-acute discharge diagnoses. Mean in-hospital costs per patient were €1580. The estimated yearly acute healthcare cost in low-risk chest-pain patients in the Netherlands is €30,438,700. In low-risk chest-pain patients according to pre-hospital risk assessment, acute healthcare utilization and costs are high, with limited added value. Possibly, if a complete risk assessment can be performed by ambulance paramedics, acute hospitalization of the majority of low-risk patients is not necessary, which can lead to substantial cost reduction. Dutch Trial Register [http://www.trialregister.nl]: trial number 4205.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11791896 and 11755652
Volume :
17
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Applied Health Economics and Health Policy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1241f5d12e89efbd52d44ed91595234d