Incremental Cost of Prematurity by Week of Gestational Age

Abstract Objective This study was aimed to compare health care costs and utilization at birth through 1 year, between preterm and term infants, by week of gestation. Methods A cross-sectional study of infants born at ≥ 23 weeks of gestational age (GA) at Kaiser Permanente N...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eileen M. Walsh, Sherian X. Li, Libby K. Black, Michael Kuzniewicz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc. 2019-01-01
Series:American Journal of Perinatology Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.1055/s-0039-1683934
id doaj-5b703e23fe5644e691a440a5d5a4f93a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5b703e23fe5644e691a440a5d5a4f93a2020-11-25T03:01:50ZengThieme Medical Publishers, Inc.American Journal of Perinatology Reports2157-69982157-70052019-01-010901e76e8310.1055/s-0039-1683934Incremental Cost of Prematurity by Week of Gestational AgeEileen M. Walsh0Sherian X. Li1Libby K. Black2Michael Kuzniewicz3Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, CaliforniaDivision of Research, Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, CaliforniaGlobal Health Outcomes, Recro Pharma, Malvern, PennsylvaniaDivision of Research, Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, CaliforniaAbstract Objective This study was aimed to compare health care costs and utilization at birth through 1 year, between preterm and term infants, by week of gestation. Methods A cross-sectional study of infants born at ≥ 23 weeks of gestational age (GA) at Kaiser Permanente Northern California facilities between 2000 and 2011, using outcomes data from an internal neonatal registry and cost estimates from an internal cost management database. Adjusted models yielded estimates for cost differences for each GA group. Results Infants born at 25 to 37 weeks incur significantly higher birth hospitalization costs and experience significantly more health care utilization during the initial year of life, increasing progressively for each decreasing week of gestation, when compared with term infants. Among all very preterm infants (≤ 32 weeks), each 1-week decrease in GA is associated with incrementally higher rates of mortality and major morbidities. Conclusion We provide estimates of potential cost savings that could be attributable to interventions that delay or prevent preterm delivery. Cost differences were most extreme at the lower range of gestation (≤ 30 weeks); however, infants born moderately preterm (31–36 weeks) also contribute substantially to the burden, as they represent a higher proportion of total births.http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.1055/s-0039-1683934preterm birthhealth care costsutilizationneonatal intensive care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eileen M. Walsh
Sherian X. Li
Libby K. Black
Michael Kuzniewicz
spellingShingle Eileen M. Walsh
Sherian X. Li
Libby K. Black
Michael Kuzniewicz
Incremental Cost of Prematurity by Week of Gestational Age
American Journal of Perinatology Reports
preterm birth
health care costs
utilization
neonatal intensive care
author_facet Eileen M. Walsh
Sherian X. Li
Libby K. Black
Michael Kuzniewicz
author_sort Eileen M. Walsh
title Incremental Cost of Prematurity by Week of Gestational Age
title_short Incremental Cost of Prematurity by Week of Gestational Age
title_full Incremental Cost of Prematurity by Week of Gestational Age
title_fullStr Incremental Cost of Prematurity by Week of Gestational Age
title_full_unstemmed Incremental Cost of Prematurity by Week of Gestational Age
title_sort incremental cost of prematurity by week of gestational age
publisher Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.
series American Journal of Perinatology Reports
issn 2157-6998
2157-7005
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Abstract Objective This study was aimed to compare health care costs and utilization at birth through 1 year, between preterm and term infants, by week of gestation. Methods A cross-sectional study of infants born at ≥ 23 weeks of gestational age (GA) at Kaiser Permanente Northern California facilities between 2000 and 2011, using outcomes data from an internal neonatal registry and cost estimates from an internal cost management database. Adjusted models yielded estimates for cost differences for each GA group. Results Infants born at 25 to 37 weeks incur significantly higher birth hospitalization costs and experience significantly more health care utilization during the initial year of life, increasing progressively for each decreasing week of gestation, when compared with term infants. Among all very preterm infants (≤ 32 weeks), each 1-week decrease in GA is associated with incrementally higher rates of mortality and major morbidities. Conclusion We provide estimates of potential cost savings that could be attributable to interventions that delay or prevent preterm delivery. Cost differences were most extreme at the lower range of gestation (≤ 30 weeks); however, infants born moderately preterm (31–36 weeks) also contribute substantially to the burden, as they represent a higher proportion of total births.
topic preterm birth
health care costs
utilization
neonatal intensive care
url http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.1055/s-0039-1683934
work_keys_str_mv AT eileenmwalsh incrementalcostofprematuritybyweekofgestationalage
AT sherianxli incrementalcostofprematuritybyweekofgestationalage
AT libbykblack incrementalcostofprematuritybyweekofgestationalage
AT michaelkuzniewicz incrementalcostofprematuritybyweekofgestationalage
_version_ 1724691708597239808