Cost burden and net monetary benefit loss of neonatal hypoglycaemia

Abstract Background Neonatal hypoglycaemia is a common but treatable metabolic disorder that affects newborn infants and which, if not identified and treated adequately, may result in neurological sequelae that persist for the lifetime of the patient. The long-term financial and quality-of-life burd...

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Main Authors: Matthew J. Glasgow, Richard Edlin, Jane E. Harding
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-06098-9
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spelling doaj-17680be4afa0496cbcccaa5f65efca3b2021-02-07T12:09:14ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632021-02-0121111310.1186/s12913-021-06098-9Cost burden and net monetary benefit loss of neonatal hypoglycaemiaMatthew J. Glasgow0Richard Edlin1Jane E. Harding2Liggins Institute, University of AucklandSchool of Population Health, University of AucklandLiggins Institute, University of AucklandAbstract Background Neonatal hypoglycaemia is a common but treatable metabolic disorder that affects newborn infants and which, if not identified and treated adequately, may result in neurological sequelae that persist for the lifetime of the patient. The long-term financial and quality-of-life burden of neonatal hypoglycaemia has not been previously examined. Methods We assessed the postnatal hospital and long-term costs associated with neonatal hypoglycaemia over 80 year and 18 year time horizons, using a health-system perspective and assessing impact on quality of life using quality-adjusted life year (QALYs). A decision analytic model was used to represent key outcomes in the presence and absence of neonatal hypoglycaemia. Results The chance of developing one of the outcomes of neonatal hypoglycaemia in our model (cerebral palsy, learning disabilities, seizures, vision disorders) was 24.03% in subjects who experienced neonatal hypoglycaemia and 3.56% in those who do did not. Over an 80 year time horizon a subject who experienced neonatal hypoglycaemia had a combined hospital and post-discharge cost of NZ$72,000 due to the outcomes modelled, which is NZ$66,000 greater than a subject without neonatal hypoglycaemia. The net monetary benefit lost due to neonatal hypoglycaemia, using a value per QALY of NZ$43,000, is NZ$180,000 over an 80 year time horizon. Conclusions Even under the most conservative of estimates, neonatal hypoglycaemia contributes a significant financial burden to the health system both during childhood and over a lifetime. The combination of direct costs and loss of quality of life due to neonatal hypoglycaemia means that this condition warrants further research to focus on prevention and effective treatment.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-06098-9Cerebral palsyEpilepsyLearning disorderNewborn infantVision disorder
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew J. Glasgow
Richard Edlin
Jane E. Harding
spellingShingle Matthew J. Glasgow
Richard Edlin
Jane E. Harding
Cost burden and net monetary benefit loss of neonatal hypoglycaemia
BMC Health Services Research
Cerebral palsy
Epilepsy
Learning disorder
Newborn infant
Vision disorder
author_facet Matthew J. Glasgow
Richard Edlin
Jane E. Harding
author_sort Matthew J. Glasgow
title Cost burden and net monetary benefit loss of neonatal hypoglycaemia
title_short Cost burden and net monetary benefit loss of neonatal hypoglycaemia
title_full Cost burden and net monetary benefit loss of neonatal hypoglycaemia
title_fullStr Cost burden and net monetary benefit loss of neonatal hypoglycaemia
title_full_unstemmed Cost burden and net monetary benefit loss of neonatal hypoglycaemia
title_sort cost burden and net monetary benefit loss of neonatal hypoglycaemia
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background Neonatal hypoglycaemia is a common but treatable metabolic disorder that affects newborn infants and which, if not identified and treated adequately, may result in neurological sequelae that persist for the lifetime of the patient. The long-term financial and quality-of-life burden of neonatal hypoglycaemia has not been previously examined. Methods We assessed the postnatal hospital and long-term costs associated with neonatal hypoglycaemia over 80 year and 18 year time horizons, using a health-system perspective and assessing impact on quality of life using quality-adjusted life year (QALYs). A decision analytic model was used to represent key outcomes in the presence and absence of neonatal hypoglycaemia. Results The chance of developing one of the outcomes of neonatal hypoglycaemia in our model (cerebral palsy, learning disabilities, seizures, vision disorders) was 24.03% in subjects who experienced neonatal hypoglycaemia and 3.56% in those who do did not. Over an 80 year time horizon a subject who experienced neonatal hypoglycaemia had a combined hospital and post-discharge cost of NZ$72,000 due to the outcomes modelled, which is NZ$66,000 greater than a subject without neonatal hypoglycaemia. The net monetary benefit lost due to neonatal hypoglycaemia, using a value per QALY of NZ$43,000, is NZ$180,000 over an 80 year time horizon. Conclusions Even under the most conservative of estimates, neonatal hypoglycaemia contributes a significant financial burden to the health system both during childhood and over a lifetime. The combination of direct costs and loss of quality of life due to neonatal hypoglycaemia means that this condition warrants further research to focus on prevention and effective treatment.
topic Cerebral palsy
Epilepsy
Learning disorder
Newborn infant
Vision disorder
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-06098-9
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