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Abstract #20392 Published in IGR 10-1

Direct costs of blindness experienced by patients enrolled in managed care

Frick KD; Walt JG; Chiang TH; Doyle JJ; Stern LS; Katz LM; Dolgitser M; Hendlish SK
Ophthalmology 2008; 115: 11-17


PURPOSE: To evaluate total and condition-related charges incurred by blind patients in a managed care population in the United States and compare total charges with those of a matched nonblind cohort. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. PARTICIPANTS: Patients with blindness (N = 10 796) and a 1:1 matched cohort of nonblind patients were selected from a managed care claims database. All study subjects were required to be ≥ 18 years old at diagnosis (blind patients) or enrollment (nonblind patients) and to have had ≥ 1 years of continuous follow-up. METHODS: Total and pharmacy-related direct medical charges in the first year of follow-up were calculated for both blind and nonblind cohorts. Among blind patients, condition-related charges, charge per treated person, and charge breakdown by age group were calculated. For patients with follow-up extending past 1 year, total charges (both cohorts) and condition-related charges (blind cohort only) were assessed and annualized. Mean and median charges were assessed for blind and nonblind patients within each stratum of matched covariates; a multivariate linear regression assessed the statistical significance of the difference in charges between the 2 cohorts. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Total health care charges in the first year of follow-up and condition-related health care charges in the first year of follow-up for blind patients. RESULTS: For the blind population (mean age, 52 years [standard deviation (SD), 17.5]), the total mean and median health care charges per person in the first year were $20,677 (SD, $48,835) and $6854, respectively. Total mean and median health care charges per nonblind patient in the first year were $13,321 (SD, $40,059) and $3778, respectively. Condition-related charges among blind patients were substantially lower than total charges, with mean and median charges per person of $4565 (SD, $17,472) and $371, respectively. After adjusting for covariates, blind patients had significantly higher total health care charges in the first year of follow-up than nonblind patients (P<0.0001). Costs of the blind did not differ substantially from costs of the normally sighted in subsequent years of follow-up. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates the substantial direct cost burden of blindness during the first year of follow-up in a managed care population.

Dr. K.D. Frick, Department of Health Policy and Management, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA


Classification:

14 Costing studies; pharmacoeconomics



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