Direct medical costs of traumatic thoracolumbar spine fractures
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1080/17453670510041745Abstract
Background The costs and cost-effectiveness of treatment of thoracolumbar fractures are poorly known. Methods We estimated the costs of hospital care and outpatient visits for patients with traumatic thoracolumbar spine fractures. Results Stable fractures without neurological deficits were treated nonoperatively and the costs were EUR 5,100. Unstable fractures without neurological deficits were treated either nonoperatively, with an average of 29 hospitalization days and average cost of EUR 12,500 (86% of which represented hospitalization costs), or operatively with 24 hospitalization days and average cost of EUR 19,700 (48% of which represented hospitalization costs and 42% surgery costs). Unstable fractures with neurological deficits were usually operated (average costs EUR 31,900). Interpretation For all patients, the costs of hospitalization days were the main cost driver. Although the length of stay for patients with unstable fractures and without neurological deficit who were treated operatively was shorter than for patients treated nonoperatively, the total costs were higher due to the additional costs of surgery. Surgical treatment must therefore be shown to give a better outcome in order to outweigh the costs. Future research should focus on the cost-effectiveness of operative and nonoperative treatment of patients with unstable vertebral fractures who have no neurological deficits, and take indirect costs and quality of life into account.Downloads
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Published
2005-01-01
How to Cite
van der Roer, N., de Bruyne, M. C., Bakker, F. C., van Tulder, M. W., & Boers, M. (2005). Direct medical costs of traumatic thoracolumbar spine fractures. Acta Orthopaedica, 76(5), 662–666. https://doi.org/10.1080/17453670510041745
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Acta Orthopaedica (Scandinavica) content is available freely online as from volume 1, 1930. The journal owner owns the copyright for all material published until volume 80, 2009. As of June 2009, the journal has however been published fully Open Access, meaning the authors retain copyright to their work. As of June 2009, articles have been published under CC-BY-NC or CC-BY licenses, unless otherwise specified.
