胰腺手术的财务影响:医院是大赢家,而不是外科医生!

Nitzan Zohar, A. Nevler, Sean P. Maher, Matthew C. Rosenthal, Florence Williams, Wilbur B. Bowne, Charles J. Yeo, H. Lavu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

大容量胰腺手术中心需要在专业技术、时间和资源方面投入大量资金,以实现最佳的患者治疗效果。许多临床医生和医院管理者对大型胰腺手术的经济效益了解有限。事实上,更多地考虑这些财务方面的因素可能会对加强临床护理和更广泛的大容量胰腺手术项目的可持续性产生影响。 在这项回顾性观察研究中,我们对 2021 财年在一家学术医疗中心接受胰十二指肠切除术(PD)、全胰切除术或远端胰切除术的患者进行了评估。使用 Qlik 围手术期数据库获取了患者的详细住院费用和专业费用。研究队列的临床数据来自一个经 IRB 批准的前瞻性胰腺手术数据库。其中包括 91 天围手术期的费用。P<0.05为差异显著。 在研究期间,159 名可评估患者接受了 3 项指定胰腺切除术中的 1 项。97名患者(61%)被诊断为腺癌,70%(n = 110)接受了胰腺切除术。整个围手术期的总费用(专业人员和医院的综合费用)为 20,661,759 美元。每位患者的中位收费为 130,306 美元(四分位数间距 [IQR],34,534 美元)。直接护理成本中位数为 23,219 美元(IQR,6321 美元),每个病例的贡献利润中位数为 10,092 美元(IQR,22,949 美元)。每名患者的外科医生专业收费中位数为 7700 美元(IQR,1296 美元),而专业收费收据为 3453 美元(IQR,1144 美元)(占外科医生收费的 45%)。其他医护人员,如麻醉师(收费 4945 美元,收据 1406 美元 [28%])和病理学家(收费 3035 美元,收据 680 美元 [22%]),每名患者的专业收费和收据之间的差异也很大。外科医生的专业费用只占总费用的 6%,而麻醉科和病理科的专业费用分别占总费用的 4% 和 2%。供应费占总费用的 3%。手术时间越长,住院费和麻醉费就越高,而外科医生的费用却没有显著增加(P < 0.001、P < 0.001 和 P = 0.2)。男性、糖尿病和低血清白蛋白与住院总费用增加相关(分别为 P = 0.01、P = 0.01 和 P = 0.03)。 外科医生在胰腺大部切除术患者围手术期临床护理中的作用至关重要,绝不仅限于手术当天。然而,在美国目前的医疗保健系统中,以专业费用的形式偿还给外科医生的费用仅占这些患者医疗保健总收入的一小部分。这种不平衡使得医院和胰腺外科之间必须建立实质性的财务合作关系,以确保这些项目的长期可行性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Financial Implications of Pancreatic Surgery: The Hospital Is the Big Winner, Not the Surgeon!
High-volume pancreatic surgery centers require a significant investment in expertise, time, and resources to achieve optimal patient outcomes. A detailed understanding of the economics of major pancreatic surgery is limited among many clinicians and hospital administrators. A greater consideration of these financial aspects may in fact have implications for enhancing clinical care and for a broader sustainability of high-volume pancreatic surgery programs. In this retrospective observational study, patients who underwent pancreaticoduodenectomy (PD), total pancreatectomy, or distal pancreatectomy at one academic medical center during the fiscal year 2021 were evaluated. Detailed hospital charges and professional fees were obtained for patients using the Qlik perioperative database. Clinical data for the study cohort were gathered from a prospectively maintained, IRB-approved pancreatic surgery database. Charges for the 91-day perioperative period were included. A P < 0.05 was considered significant. During the study period, 159 evaluable patients underwent 1 of 3 designated pancreatic resections included in the analysis. Ninety-seven patients (61%) were diagnosed with adenocarcinoma and 70% (n = 110) underwent PD. The total charges (combined professional and hospital charges) for the cohort encompassing the entire perioperative period were $20,661,759. The median charge per patient was $130,306 (interquartile range [IQR], $34,534). The median direct cost of care was $23,219 (IQR, $6321) and the median contribution margin per case was $10,092 (IQR, $22,949). The median surgeon professional fee charges were $7700 per patient (IQR, $1296) as compared to $3453 (IQR, $1,144) for professional fee receipts (45% of the surgeon charge). The differences between the professional fee charges and receipts per patient were also considerable for other health care professionals such as anesthesiologists ($4945 charges vs $1406 receipts [28%]) and pathologists ($3035 charges vs $680 receipts [22%]). The surgeon professional fees were only 6% of the total charges, while the professional fees for anesthesiology and pathology were 4% and 2% of the total charges, respectively. Supply charges were 3% of the total charges. Longer operative time was correlated with increased hospital and anesthesia charges, without a significant increase in surgeon charges (P < 0.001, P < 0.001, and P = 0.2, respectively). Male sex, diabetes, and low serum albumin correlated with greater total hospital charges (P = 0.01, P = 0.01, and P = 0.03, respectively). The role of the surgeon in the perioperative clinical care of major pancreatic resection patients is crucial and important and is by no means limited to the operative day. Nevertheless, in the context of the current US health care system, the reimbursement to the surgeon in the form of professional fees is a relatively small fraction of the total health care receipts for these patients. This imbalance necessitates a substantial financial partnership between hospitals and their pancreatic surgery units to ensure the long-term viability of these programs.
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