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Healthcare utilization and cost trajectories post-stroke: role of caregiver and stroke factors

Authors :
Shilpa Tyagi
Gerald Choon-Huat Koh
Luo Nan
Kelvin Bryan Tan
Helen Hoenig
David B. Matchar
Joanne Yoong
Eric A. Finkelstein
Kim En Lee
N. Venketasubramanian
Edward Menon
Kin Ming Chan
Deidre Anne De Silva
Philip Yap
Boon Yeow Tan
Effie Chew
Sherry H. Young
Yee Sien Ng
Tian Ming Tu
Yan Hoon Ang
Keng Hee Kong
Rajinder Singh
Reshma A. Merchant
Hui Meng Chang
Tseng Tsai Yeo
Chou Ning
Angela Cheong
Yu Li Ng
Chuen Seng Tan
Source :
BMC Health Services Research, Vol 18, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
BMC, 2018.

Abstract

Abstract Background It is essential to study post-stroke healthcare utilization trajectories from a stroke patient caregiver dyadic perspective to improve healthcare delivery, practices and eventually improve long-term outcomes for stroke patients. However, literature addressing this area is currently limited. Addressing this gap, our study described the trajectory of healthcare service utilization by stroke patients and associated costs over 1-year post-stroke and examined the association with caregiver identity and clinical stroke factors. Methods Patient and caregiver variables were obtained from a prospective cohort, while healthcare data was obtained from the national claims database. Generalized estimating equation approach was used to get the population average estimates of healthcare utilization and cost trend across 4 quarters post-stroke. Results Five hundred ninety-two stroke patient and caregiver dyads were available for current analysis. The highest utilization occurred in the first quarter post-stroke across all service types and decreased with time. The incidence rate ratio (IRR) of hospitalization decreased by 51, 40, 11 and 1% for patients having spouse, sibling, child and others as caregivers respectively when compared with not having a caregiver (p = 0.017). Disability level modified the specialist outpatient clinic usage trajectory with increasing difference between mildly and severely disabled sub-groups across quarters. Stroke type and severity modified the primary care cost trajectory with expected cost estimates differing across second to fourth quarters for moderately-severe ischemic (IRR: 1.67, 1.74, 1.64; p = 0.003), moderately-severe non-ischemic (IRR: 1.61, 3.15, 2.44; p = 0.001) and severe non-ischemic (IRR: 2.18, 4.92, 4.77; p = 0.032) subgroups respectively, compared to first quarter. Conclusion Highlighting the quarterly variations, we reported distinct utilization trajectories across subgroups based on clinical characteristics. Caregiver availability reducing hospitalization supports revisiting caregiver’s role as potential hidden workforce, incentivizing their efforts by designing socially inclusive bundled payment models for post-acute stroke care and adopting family-centered clinical care practices.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14726963
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMC Health Services Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8432e1abe004d0d86b620a3b2a13a21
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-018-3696-3