
Direct Cost of Anesthesia in Traumatic Patients with Massive Bleeding: a Prospective Micro-Costing Study
Author(s) -
Asamaporn Puetpaiboon,
Sunisa Chatmongkolchart,
Osaree Akaraborworn,
Yupin Apisitthiwong
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
wetchasan songkhla nakarin
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2773-8728
DOI - 10.31584/psumj.2021246254
Subject(s) - medicine , indirect costs , direct cost , observational study , prospective cohort study , anesthesia , blood loss , cost analysis , activity based costing , surgery , blood transfusion , capital cost , emergency medicine , accounting , electrical engineering , marketing , reliability engineering , business , engineering
Objective:This study aimed to quantify the direct cost as well as cost-to-charge ratio of anesthetic care in traumatic patients with intraoperative massive bleeding.Material and Methods: This study was a prospective observational cost analysis study, conducted in Songklanagarind Hospital, Thailand. Traumatic patients from any mechanisms were recruited. Massive bleeding was defined as estimated blood loss of at least one blood volume in 24 hours or a half of blood volume in 3 hours. The cost components were valued by the bottom-up approach. The direct cost was divided into 4 categories; the labor cost, the capital cost, the material cost and the cost of drugs.Results: From September 2017 to August 2018; 10 eligible patients were included. Seven patients had motorcycle accidents, two patients fell from height and another one was in a minibus accident. Two patients died on the operating table, and another two died within 48 hours. The median direct cost per case was 9,321 Baht (264 United States Dollars), and the cost-to-charge ratio was 0.62. The median Sequential Organ Failure Assessment Score was 8. The median intraoperative blood loss was 3,500 millimeters.Conclusion: Our study provided information on the direct costs of anesthesia in traumatic patients with massive bleeding. The direct cost was 62.0% of the hospital charge. However, this study did not analyze the indirect cost.