
The Costs of Medical Care for Covid-19 Patients: A case study in Turkey
Author(s) -
Cenk Teker,
Doğancan Çavmak,
Hakan Avcı
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
asia pacific journal of health management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2204-3136
pISSN - 1833-3818
DOI - 10.24083/apjhm.v16i4.1167
Subject(s) - intensive care unit , activity based costing , covid-19 , medicine , total cost , emergency medicine , medical emergency , unit cost , intensive care , cost analysis , indirect costs , unit (ring theory) , cost database , cost driver , intensive care medicine , business , operations research , psychology , economics , engineering , accounting , disease , management , infectious disease (medical specialty) , mathematics education , microeconomics
Objective: This study aims to calculate the medical costs of Covid-19 patients for hospitals based on the severity of clinical care.Design: The study was conducted in a hospital in Istanbul/Turkey. A micro-costing approach was performed using historical cost data for one year. All direct and indirect medical inputs were determined in quantities and monetary values for four types of Covid-19 patients in the hospital.Results: The analysis calculated the unit cost of an outpatient to be 459,99 ₺, while the cost per day for inpatient to be 1.184,63 ₺, for non-intubated in intensive care unit to be 1.938,11, for intubated in the intensive unit to be 2.393,99₺. The study also indicates that the total cost of a non-intubated patient in intensive care units is 1,54 times higher than the total cost per inpatient. An intubated patient’s cost is 2,08 times higher than an inpatient’s cost.Conclusion: This study indicates that Covid-19 patients incur significantly high costs for hospitals. The findings of the study provide empirical data for different types of patients which can be used in clinical management and can help all related governing bodies to plan their actions and make the decisions