Abstract

A persistently high US drug overdose death toll and increasing health care use associated with substance use disorder (SUD) create urgency for comprehensive estimates of attributable direct costs, which can assist in identifying cost-effective ways to prevent SUD and help people to receive effective treatment. To estimate the annual attributable medical cost of SUD in US hospitals from the health care payer perspective. This economic evaluation of observational data used multivariable regression analysis and mathematical modeling of hospital encounter costs, controlling for patient demographic, clinical, and insurance characteristics, and compared encounters with and without secondary SUD diagnosis to statistically identify the total attributable cost of SUD. Nationally representative hospital emergency department (ED) and inpatient encounters from the 2017 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Nationwide Emergency Department Sample and National Inpatient Sample were studied. Statistical analysis was performed from March to June 2020. International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) principal or secondary SUD diagnosis on the hospital discharge record according to the Clinical Classifications Software categories (disorders related to alcohol, cannabis, hallucinogens, inhalants, opioids, sedatives, stimulants, and other substances). Annual attributable SUD medical cost in hospitals overall and by substance type (eg, alcohol). The number of encounters (ED and inpatient) with SUD diagnosis (principal or secondary) and the mean cost attributable to SUD per encounter by substance type are also reported. This study examined a total of 124 573 175 hospital ED encounters and 33 648 910 hospital inpatient encounters from the 2017 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Nationwide Emergency Department Sample and National Inpatient Sample. Total annual estimated attributable SUD medical cost in hospitals was $13.2 billion. By substance type, the cost ranged from $4 million for inhalant-related disorders to $7.6 billion for alcohol-related disorders. This study's results suggest that the cost of effective prevention and treatment may be substantially offset by a reduction in the high direct medical cost of SUD hospital care. The findings of this study may inform the treatment of patients with SUD during hospitalization, which presents a critical opportunity to engage patients who are at high risk for overdose. Aligning incentives such that prevention cost savings accrue to payers and practitioners that are otherwise responsible for SUD-related medical costs in hospitals and other health care settings may encourage prevention investment.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe US drug overdose death rate has more than tripled in 2 decades, reaching more than 70 000 deaths in 2019.1 In the most recent available data, hospital admissions with principal diagnosis of mental health or substance use disorder (SUD) increased 12% from 2005 to 2014 and emergency department (ED) visits increased 44% from 2006 to 2014.2,3 Hospital encounters with SUD as a concomitant condition (not principal diagnosis) are increasing; admissions documenting patients’ opioid use disorder without overdose quadrupled from 1993 to 2016 (to 155 discharges per 100 000 population).[4]

  • The US drug overdose death rate has more than tripled in 2 decades, reaching more than 70 000 deaths in 2019.1 In the most recent available data, hospital admissions with principal diagnosis of mental health or substance use disorder (SUD) increased 12% from 2005 to 2014 and emergency department (ED) visits increased 44% from 2006 to 2014.2,3 Hospital encounters with SUD as a concomitant condition are increasing; admissions documenting patients’ opioid use disorder without overdose quadrupled from 1993 to 2016.[4]These trends create urgency to estimate attributable direct costs to assist in identifying costeffective ways to prevent SUD and link people to effective treatment

  • This study examined a total of 124 573 175 hospital ED encounters and 33 648 910 hospital inpatient encounters from the 2017 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Nationwide Emergency Department Sample and National Inpatient Sample

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Summary

Introduction

The US drug overdose death rate has more than tripled in 2 decades, reaching more than 70 000 deaths in 2019.1 In the most recent available data, hospital admissions with principal diagnosis of mental health or substance use disorder (SUD) increased 12% from 2005 to 2014 and emergency department (ED) visits increased 44% from 2006 to 2014.2,3 Hospital encounters with SUD as a concomitant condition (not principal diagnosis) are increasing; admissions documenting patients’ opioid use disorder without overdose quadrupled from 1993 to 2016 (to 155 discharges per 100 000 population).[4]. This study aimed to use nationally representative data to estimate the attributable direct annual medical cost of SUD in US hospitals

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