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Health-care costs associated with amputation or reconstruction of a limb-threatening injury.

Authors :
MacKenzie EJ
Jones AS
Bosse MJ
Castillo RC
Pollak AN
Webb LX
Swiontkowski MF
Kellam JF
Smith DG
Sanders RW
Jones AL
Starr AJ
McAndrew MP
Patterson BM
Burgess AR
MacKenzie, Ellen J
Jones, Alison Snow
Bosse, Michael J
Castillo, Renan C
Pollak, Andrew N
Source :
Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, American Volume; Aug2007, Vol. 89 Issue 8, p1685-1692, 8p
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Recent reports have suggested that functional outcomes are similar following either amputation or reconstruction of a severely injured lower extremity. The goal of this study was to compare two-year direct health-care costs and projected lifetime health-care costs associated with these two treatment pathways.<bold>Methods: </bold>Two-year health-care costs were estimated for 545 patients with a unilateral limb-threatening lower-extremity injury treated at one of eight level-I trauma centers. Included in the calculation were costs related to (1) the initial hospitalization, (2) all rehospitalizations for acute care related to the limb injury, (3) inpatient rehabilitation, (4) outpatient doctor visits, (5) outpatient physical and occupational therapy, and (6) purchase and maintenance of prosthetic devices. All dollar figures were inflated to constant 2002 dollars with use of the medical service Consumer Price Index. To estimate projected lifetime costs, the number of expected life years was multiplied by an estimate of future annual health-care costs and added to an estimate of future costs associated with the purchase and maintenance of prosthetic devices.<bold>Results: </bold>When costs associated with rehospitalizations and post-acute care were added to the cost of the initial hospitalization, the two-year costs for reconstruction and amputation were similar. When prosthesis-related costs were added, there was a substantial difference between the two groups ($81,316 for patients treated with reconstruction and $91,106 for patients treated with amputation). The projected lifetime health-care cost for the patients who had undergone amputation was three times higher than that for those treated with reconstruction ($509,275 and $163,282, respectively).<bold>Conclusions: </bold>These estimates add support to previous conclusions that efforts to improve the rate of successful reconstructions have merit. Not only is reconstruction a reasonable goal at an experienced level-I trauma center, it results in lower lifetime costs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219355
Volume :
89
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, American Volume
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
106007101