Costs and cost-effectiveness of a telemedicine intensive care unit program in 6 intensive care units in a large health care system
- PMID: 21376515
- PMCID: PMC3103644
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jcrc.2010.12.004
Costs and cost-effectiveness of a telemedicine intensive care unit program in 6 intensive care units in a large health care system
Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to estimate the costs and cost-effectiveness of a telemedicine intensive care unit (ICU) (tele-ICU) program.
Materials and methods: We used an observational study with ICU patients cared for during the pre-tele-ICU period and ICU patients cared for during the post-tele-ICU period in 6 ICUs at 5 hospitals that are part of a large nonprofit health care system in the Gulf Coast region. We obtained data on a sample of 4142 ICU patients: 2034 in the pre-tele-ICU period and 2108 in the post-tele-ICU period. Economic outcomes were hospital costs, ICU costs and floor costs, measured for average daily costs, costs per case, and costs per patient.
Results: After the implementation of the tele-ICU, the hospital daily cost increased from $4302 to $5340 (24%); the hospital cost per case, from $21,967 to $31,318 (43%); and the cost per patient, from $20,231 to $25,846 (28%). Although the tele-ICU intervention was not cost-effective in patients with Simplified Acute Physiology Score II 50 or less, it was cost-effective in the sickest patients with Simplified Acute Physiology Score II more than 50 (17% of patients) because it decreased hospital mortality without increasing costs significantly.
Conclusions: Hospital administrators may conclude that a tele-ICU program aimed at the sickest patients is cost-effective.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Authors have no conflicts of interest.
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