## Abstract Statistical models have been used to assess the influence of clinical and demographic factors on hospital charge and length of stay (LOS). Hospital costs constitute a significant proportion of overall expenditure in health care. With escalating costs, knowing the correlates of LOS and i
Hospital costs estimation and prediction as a function of patient and admission characteristics
β Scribed by Robert Ramiarina; Renan MVR Almeida; Wagner CA Pereira
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 110 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0749-6753
- DOI
- 10.1002/hpm.911
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The present work analyzed the association between hospital costs and patient admission characteristics in a general public hospital in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The unit costs method was used to estimate inpatient day costs associated to specific hospital clinics. With this aim, three βcost centersβ were defined in order to group direct and indirect expenses pertaining to the clinics. After the costs were estimated, a standard linear regression model was developed for correlating cost units and their putative predictors (the patients gender and age, the admission type (urgency/elective), ICU admission (yes/no), blood transfusion (yes/no), the admission outcome (death/no death), the complexity of the medical procedures performed, and a riskβadjustment index). Data were collected for 3100 patients, January 2001βJanuary 2003. Average inpatient costs across clinics ranged from (US$) 1135 [Orthopedics] to 3101 [Cardiology]. Costs increased according to increases in the riskβadjustment index in all clinics, and the index was statistically significant in all clinics except Urology, General surgery, and Clinical medicine. The occupation rate was inversely correlated to costs, and age had no association with costs. The (adjusted) per cent of explained variance varied between 36.3% [Clinical medicine] and 55.1% [Thoracic surgery clinic]. The estimates are an important step towards the standardization of hospital costs calculation, especially for countries that lack formal hospital accounting systems. Copyright Β© 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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A survey of the 6,161 admissions t o a pediatric hospital of Caracas during 1976 was conducted to determine the frequency and some characteristics of those admissions due t o birth defects. The charts of all patients in whom a birth defect had been suspected or diagnosed during admission were review
## Abstract ## CONTEXT: The addition of clinical data or present on admission (POA) codes to administrative databases improves the accuracy of predicting clinical outcomes, such as inpatient mortality. Other POA information may also explain variation in hospital outcomes, such as length of stay (L