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Costs of neonatal care for low‐birthweight babies in English hospitals
Author(s) -
Mistry Hema,
Dowie Robin,
Franklin Rodney CG,
Jani Bhavdeep R
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
acta pædiatrica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1651-2227
pISSN - 0803-5253
DOI - 10.1111/j.1651-2227.2009.01316.x
Subject(s) - medicine , neonatal intensive care unit , pediatrics , audit , activity based costing , gestational age , emergency medicine , pregnancy , business , management , marketing , biology , economics , genetics
Aim:  To estimate mean costs of neonatal care for babies with birthweights ≤1800 g in a regional Level 3 unit and three Level 2 units providing short‐term intensive care. Method:  Babies ≤1800 g admitted to units in four hospitals in England over 15 months in 2001–2002 were audited until discharge. Unit costs (2005–2006 prices) were attributed to their resource items, including neonatal cot occupancy, pharmaceuticals, blood products and ambulance transfers. Bootstrapped mean costs were derived for the Level 3 unit and the Level 2 units combined. Results:  The mean gestation period for 199 Level 3 babies was 29.5 weeks compared with 30.4 weeks for 192 Level 2 babies (p = 0.003). Mean costs excluding ambulance journeys were £17  861 per Level 3 baby and £12  344 per Level 2 baby. Level 3 babies <1000 g averaged £26  815, whereas Level 2 babies <1000 g were generally less costly than babies 1000–1499 g. Ambulances transported 76 Level 3 babies and 62 Level 2 babies; their adjusted mean costs were £18  495 and £12  881, respectively. Conclusion:  By comprehensively costing resource components, the magnitude of total costs for low‐birthweight babies has been revealed, thus demonstrating the importance of budgets for neonatal units being realistically determined by commissioners of neonatal services.

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