International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Jul 2020)

The burden and costs of sepsis and reimbursement of its treatment in a developing country: An observational study on focal infections in Indonesia

  • Abdul Khairul Rizki Purba,
  • Nina Mariana,
  • Gestina Aliska,
  • Sonny Hadi Wijaya,
  • Riyanti Retno Wulandari,
  • Usman Hadi,
  • Hamzah,
  • Cahyo Wibisono Nugroho,
  • Jurjen van der Schans,
  • Maarten J. Postma

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 96
pp. 211 – 218

Abstract

Read online

Objectives: This study aimed to determine the burden of sepsis with focal infections in the resource-limited context of Indonesia and to propose national prices for sepsis reimbursement. Methods: A retrospective observational study was conducted from 2013–2016 on cost of surviving and non-surviving sepsis patients from a payer perspective using inpatient billing records in four hospitals. The national burden of sepsis was calculated and proposed national prices for reimbursement were developed. Results: Of the 14,076 sepsis patients, 5,876 (41.7%) survived and 8,200 (58.3%) died. The mean hospital costs incurred per surviving and deceased sepsis patient were US$1,011 (SE ± 23.4) and US$1,406 (SE ± 27.8), respectively. The national burden of sepsis in 100,000 patients was estimated to be US$130 million. Sepsis patients with multifocal infections and a single focal lower-respiratory tract infection (LRTI) were estimated as being the two with the highest economic burden (US$48 million and US$33 million, respectively, within 100,000 sepsis patients). Sepsis with cardiovascular infection was estimated to warrant the highest proposed national price for reimbursement (US$4,256). Conclusions: Multifocal infections and LRTIs are the major focal infections with the highest burden of sepsis. This study showed varying cost estimates for sepsis, necessitating a new reimbursement system with adjustment of the national prices taking the particular foci into account.

Keywords