Abstract

BackgroundHealthcare expenditure within the intensive care unit (ICU) is costly. A cost reduction strategy may be to target patients accounting for a disproportionate amount of healthcare spending, or high-cost users. This study aims to describe high-cost users in the ICU, including health outcomes and cost patterns.MethodsWe conducted a population-based retrospective cohort study of patients with ICU admissions in Ontario from 2011 to 2018. Patients with total healthcare costs in the year following ICU admission (including the admission itself) in the upper 10th percentile were defined as high-cost users. We compared characteristics and outcomes including length of stay, mortality, disposition, and costs between groups.ResultsAmong 370,061 patients included, 37,006 were high-cost users. High-cost users were 64.2 years old, 58.3% male, and had more comorbidities (41.2% had ≥3) when likened to non-high cost users (66.1 years old, 57.2% male, 27.9% had ≥3 comorbidities). ICU length of stay was four times greater for high-cost users compared to non-high cost users (22.4 days, 95% confidence interval [CI] 22.0–22.7 days vs. 5.56 days, 95% CI 5.54–5.57 days). High-cost users had lower in-hospital mortality (10.0% vs.14.2%), but increased dispositioning outside of home (77.4% vs. 42.2%) compared to non-high-cost users. Total healthcare costs were five-fold higher for high-cost users ($238,231, 95% CI $237,020–$239,442) compared to non-high-cost users ($45,155, 95% CI $45,046–$45,264). High-cost users accounted for 37.0% of total healthcare costs.ConclusionHigh-cost users have increased length of stay, lower in-hospital mortality, and higher total healthcare costs when compared to non-high-cost users. Further studies into cost patterns and predictors of high-cost users are necessary to identify methods of decreasing healthcare expenditure.

Highlights

  • Healthcare expenditure within the intensive care unit (ICU) is costly

  • We identified a total of 370,061 patients admitted to the ICU based on inclusion criteria

  • Highcost users had a mean age of 64.2 years (95% confidence interval [CI] 64.0–64.3 years), compared to 66.1 years in the non-high-cost user group

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Summary

Introduction

Healthcare expenditure within the intensive care unit (ICU) is costly. A cost reduction strategy may be to target patients accounting for a disproportionate amount of healthcare spending, or high-cost users. A proposed intervention is to reduce spending on patients who account for a disproportionately large amount of health care spending, or high-cost users. In Canada, these patients were found to be younger, admitted with subarachnoid hemorrhage, acute respiratory failure, or complications of procedures, in contrast to high-cost users outside of the ICU, which have been found to be older with multiple medical comorbidities [6, 14, 16,17,18,19] While several of these studies included a cost analysis, they largely limited their scope to inpatient costs in tertiary care centres [9, 14, 16, 18]. This information can provide insight into the characteristics of high-cost users and guide future work that can identify interventions that may reduce future healthcare expenditure

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