Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open (Jun 2024)
The hospital costs of high emergency department pediatric readiness
Abstract
Abstract Objective We estimate annual hospital expenditures to achieve high emergency department (ED) pediatric readiness (HPR), that is, weighted Pediatric Readiness Score (wPRS) ≥ 88 (0–100 scale) across EDs with different pediatric volumes of children, overall and after accounting for current levels of readiness. Methods We calculated the annual hospital costs of HPR based on two components: (1) ED pediatric equipment and supplies and (2) labor costs required for a Pediatric Emergency Care Coordinator (PECC) to perform pediatric readiness tasks. Data sources to generate labor cost estimates included: 2021 national salary information from U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, detailed patient and readiness data from 983 EDs in 11 states, the 2021 National Pediatric Readiness Project assessment; a national PECC survey; and a regional PECC survey. Data sources for equipment and supply costs included: purchasing costs from seven healthcare organizations and equipment usage per ED pediatric volume. We excluded costs of day‐to‐day ED operations (ie, direct clinical care and routine ED supplies). Results The total annual hospital costs for HPR ranged from $77,712 (95% CI 54,719–100,694) for low volume EDs to $279,134 (95% CI 196,487–362,179) for very high volume EDs; equipment costs accounted for 0.9–5.0% of expenses. The total annual cost‐per‐patient ranged from $3/child (95% CI 2–4/child) to $222/child (95% CI 156–288/child). After accounting for current readiness levels, the cost to reach HPR ranged from $23,775 among low volume EDs to $145,521 among high volume EDs, with costs per patient of $4/child to $48/child. Conclusions Annual hospital costs for HPR are modest, particularly when considered per child.
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