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European Heart Journal 2002 23(7):574-578; doi:10.1053/euhj.2001.3031
Copyright © 2002 by the European Society of Cardiology.
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Determinants of costs and resource utilization associated with open heart surgery

E Sokolovica,f1, D Schmidlinb, E.R Schmidb, M Turinac, C Ruefd, M Schwenkglenksa and T.D Szucsa

a Department of Medical Economics, University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland
b Division of Cardiovascular Anaesthesia, University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland
c Clinic of Cardiovascular Surgery, University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland
d Department of Hospital Hygiene, University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland

revised September 6, 2001; accepted September 12, 2001

Abstract

Aims This study sought to determine the patient- and the therapy-related determinants of in-hospital costs for patients undergoing heart surgery at the University Hospital in Zurich.

Methods and Results We performed a retrospective analysis of all adult cardiac surgical patients from the canton St. Gallen who were covered by a fixed fee arrangement (29500 Swiss francs (19470 Euro)) and referred to our institution during 1998. A total of 201 patients (143 (71%) male) with basic insurance were hospitalized in 1998 under the fixed fee arrangement. The mean age of the patients was 61·4 years (95% confidence intervals (CI): 60; 63). With the help of univariate analysis, the following pre-operative characteristics were found to be significantly associated with cost: age (P<0·001), pre-operative cardiac diagnosis (coronary vs valvular heart disease) (P<0·001) and EuroSCORE (P<0·0001). A significant correlation was also found between intra-operative variables and costs (P<0·0001) as well as between postoperative variables and costs (P<0·0001). A linear regression model based on EuroSCORE, operation time and postoperative infection status is able to predict costs for patients (all P -values <0·0001, except for P<0·05 for operation time, R2=0·565).

Conclusions These results suggest that both pre-operative (patient related) and intra-operative (therapy- and patient-related) variables are predictors of costs in cardiac surgical patients.

Key Words: Economics, risk scores, insurance, infection, outcome

f1 Correspondence: Emina Sokolovic MD, Georg Kempf-Str. 5, CH-8046 Zurich, Switzerland.


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