How Much Does Dysphagia Cost? Understanding the Additional Costs of Dysphagia for New Zealand in Patients Hospitalised with Stroke.

IF 3.2 3区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Shnece Duncan, Andrea Menclova, Maggie-Lee Huckabee, Dominique A Cadilhac, Anna Ranta
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Dysphagia (i.e., disordered swallowing) is a consequence of stroke. Existing literature on the marginal cost of dysphagia after stroke is limited and ignores long-term impacts. Our aim was to determine the marginal 12-month cost attributable to dysphagia, including health-related quality of life (HRQoL) impacts, among patients hospitalised with stroke in New Zealand.

Methods: Secondary analysis of observational data from the REGIONS Care study, a national study from New Zealand of consecutively hospitalised patients with acute stroke between May 1, 2018, and October 30, 2018, including an outcome survey at 12 months among those who provided consent. Patients were identified as dysphagic if they received a swallow screen in hospital resulting in a speech language therapist review. Patients that required a nasogastric feeding tube in hospital were classified as "severe." Optimal linear propensity score matching was utilised to provide a group of patients to compare with stroke and dysphagia. All costs were converted to 2021NZD.

Results: Overall, of the 2,379 patients in the REGIONS cohort (51% male, median age: 78), 40% (944/2,379) were dysphagic (52% male, median age: 78), and 5% (111/2,379) were classified as severely dysphagic. Within 12 months of hospital discharge, dysphagia reduced HRQoL overall by 0.06 index points (95% CI: 0.028-0.100), and severe dysphagia by 0.12 index points (95% CI: 0.03-0.20). The estimated marginal 12-month cost attributable to stroke-related dysphagia was NZD 24,200 on average per patient. This estimate includes the additional hospitalisation costs (NZD 16,100), community rehabilitation services (NZD 570), hospital level aged residential care (NZD 4,030), and reduced HRQoL (NZD 3,470) over a 12-month period post-hospital discharge. The overall total marginal cost for those with severe dysphagia was NZD 34,000 per patient.

Conclusion: We report cost estimates to 12 months from a national perspective on the additional costs and HRQoL outcomes of dysphagia for people hospitalised with stroke in New Zealand. Findings provide a novel contribution internationally since few prior studies have extended beyond the acute hospital phase of care. By quantifying the economic burden, we provide information to decision makers to improve dysphagia management strategies and ultimately enhance the overall HRQoL for people with stroke and dysphagia.

吞咽困难需要多少费用?了解新西兰中风住院患者因吞咽困难产生的额外费用。
导言:吞咽困难(即吞咽障碍)是中风的一种后果。有关中风后吞咽困难边际成本的现有文献十分有限,而且忽略了长期影响。我们的目的是确定新西兰中风住院患者因吞咽困难造成的 12 个月边际成本,包括对健康相关生活质量 (HRQoL) 的影响:对 REGIONS Care 研究的观察数据进行二次分析,该研究是新西兰的一项全国性研究,对象是 2018 年 5 月 1 日至 2018 年 10 月 30 日期间连续住院的急性中风患者,包括对同意者进行 12 个月的结果调查。如果患者在医院接受了吞咽筛查,并由言语语言治疗师进行复查,则被认定为吞咽困难。需要在医院使用鼻胃喂养管的患者被归类为 "严重 "患者。采用最优线性倾向评分匹配法,为中风和吞咽困难患者提供一个比较组别。所有费用均换算为2021新西兰元:总体而言,在 REGIONS 队列的 2379 名患者中(51% 为男性,年龄中位数为 78 岁),40%(944/2379)为吞咽困难(52% 为男性,年龄中位数为 78 岁),5%(111/2379)被归类为严重吞咽困难。在出院后的 12 个月内,吞咽困难会使总体 HRQoL 下降 0.06 个指数点(95%CI,0.028 至 0.100),严重吞咽困难会使 HRQoL 下降 0.12 个指数点(95%CI,0.03 至 0.20)。中风相关吞咽困难导致的 12 个月边际成本估计为平均每位患者 24,200 美元。该估计值包括出院后 12 个月内的额外住院费用(16,100 美元)、社区康复服务(570 美元)、医院级别的老年寄宿护理(4,030 美元)和 HRQoL 降低(3,470 美元)。每位严重吞咽困难患者的总边际成本为 34,000 美元:我们从全国的角度报告了新西兰中风住院患者因吞咽困难而产生的额外费用和 HRQoL 结果的 12 个月成本估算。由于之前的研究很少超出急性期住院治疗阶段,因此研究结果在国际上具有新颖性。通过量化经济负担,我们为决策者提供了改善吞咽困难管理策略的信息,并最终提高了中风和吞咽困难患者的整体 HRQoL。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neuroepidemiology
Neuroepidemiology 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
9.90
自引率
1.80%
发文量
49
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: ''Neuroepidemiology'' is the only internationally recognised peer-reviewed periodical devoted to descriptive, analytical and experimental studies in the epidemiology of neurologic disease. The scope of the journal expands the boundaries of traditional clinical neurology by providing new insights regarding the etiology, determinants, distribution, management and prevention of diseases of the nervous system.
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