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Preterm Birth and Total Health Care Use and Costs in the First 5 Years of Life: A Population-based Study - 05/07/23

Doi : 10.1016/j.jpeds.2023.01.006 
Serena Yu, PhD 1, , Kei Lui, PhD 2, Denzil G. Fiebig, PhD 3, Javeed Travadi, MD 4, Caroline S.E. Homer, PhD 5, 6, Lynn Sinclair, PhD 6, Vanessa Scarf, PhD 6, Rosalie Viney, PhD 1
1 Faculty of Health, Centre for Health Economics Research and Evaluation, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, Australia 
2 Faculty of Medicine and Health, School of Women's and Children's Health, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia 
3 Business School, School of Economics, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia 
4 School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, Australia 
5 Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health, Burnet Institute, Melbourne, Australia 
6 Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, Australia 

Reprint requests: Serena Yu, PhD, University of Technology Sydney, Level 5 UTS Building 20, 100 Broadway, Chippendale 2008, Sydney, AustraliaUniversity of Technology SydneyLevel 5 UTS Building 20100 BroadwayChippendale 2008SydneyAustralia

Abstract

Objectives

To investigate the relationship between preterm birth and hospital/out-of-hospital care and costs over the first 5 years of life.

Study design

Birth data from a population-based cohort of 631 532 infants born between 2007 and 2013 were linked probabilistically with data on hospitalizations, primary and secondary care, and the use of medications. We analyzed the distribution of health care use and public health care costs for infants who survived at least 5 years, comparing the outcomes of extremely preterm (<28 weeks of gestation), very preterm (28-32 weeks), moderate to late preterm (32-37 weeks), and term infants (at least 37 weeks). A linear regression model was used to investigate the effect of preterm birth on these outcomes, controlling for important confounders including pregnancy and birth complications, neonatal morbidity, survival, and maternal socioeconomic characteristics.

Results

Preterm birth has a statistically significant and economically relevant effect on health care use and costs in the first 5 years of life. Compared with a term infant, preterm infants born at 32-36 weeks, 28-32 weeks, and <28 weeks of gestation had, respectively, an average of 7.0 (SE 0.06), 41.6 (0.18), and 68.7 (0.35) more hospital days; 3.1 (0.04), 11.0 (0.13), and 13.2 (0.25) more outpatient specialist physician visits; and 1.2-fold (<0.01), 6.8-fold (0.01), and 10.9-fold (0.02) higher 5-year public health care costs. Preterm infants also had statistically significantly higher levels of general practitioner visits and use of medications.

Conclusions

Higher levels of accessible care are needed for preterm infants across health care settings and over sustained periods. As our understanding of the impact of preterm birth on long-term clinical outcomes continues to improve, clinicians and policymakers should develop an accurate recognition of these needs to enable appropriate resource allocation toward research priorities and early intervention strategies.

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Keywords : preterm birth, health care utilization, health care costs, administrative data

Abbreviations : APDC, AR-DRG, GP, MBS, NICU, NICUS, NSW, PBS, PDC


Plan


 Financial support for this study was provided in part by Grant 1200602 from the Medical Research Future Fund. The funding body had no role in the research process. The authors declare no conflicts of interest.


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Vol 258

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