PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Healthcare cost attributable to bronchiolitis: A population-based cohort study.

  • Beate Sander,
  • Yaron Finkelstein,
  • Hong Lu,
  • Chenthila Nagamuthu,
  • Erin Graves,
  • Lauren C Ramsay,
  • Jeffrey C Kwong,
  • Suzanne Schuh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0260809
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 12
p. e0260809

Abstract

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ObjectiveTo determine 1-year attributable healthcare costs of bronchiolitis.MethodsUsing a population-based matched cohort and incidence-based cost analysis approach, we identified infants ResultsWe identified 58,375 infants with bronchiolitis (mean age 154±95 days, 61.3% males, 4.2% with comorbidities). Total 1-year mean bronchiolitis-attributable costs were $4,313 per patient (95%CI: $4,148-4,477), with $2,847 (95%CI: $2,712-2,982) spent on hospitalizations, $610 (95%CI: $594-627) on physician services, $562 (95%CI: $556-567)] on ED visits, $259 (95%CI: $222-297) on other healthcare costs and $35 ($27-42) on drugs. Attributable bronchiolitis costs were $2,765 (95%CI: $2735-2,794) vs $111 (95%CI: $102-121) in the initial 10 days post index date, $4,695 (95%CI: $4,589-4,800) vs $910 (95%CI: $847-973) in the initial 180 days and $1,158 (95%CI: $1,104-1213) vs $639 (95%CI: $599-679) during days 181-360. Mean 1-year bronchiolitis costs were higher in infants ConclusionsCompared to no bronchiolitis, bronchiolitis incurs five-time and two-time higher healthcare costs within the initial and subsequent six-months, respectively. Most expenses occur in the initial 10 days and relate to hospitalization.