Unlocking big data to understand health services usage and government funding during pregnancy and early childhood, evidence in Australia

Author:

Hu Yanan1ORCID,Zhang Xin2ORCID,Callander Emily1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine Monash University Melbourne Australia

2. Department of Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering Monash University Melbourne Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundMaternity care is a high‐volume and high‐cost area of health care, which entails various types of service use throughout the course of the pregnancy. Thus, the aim of this study was to explore the most common reasons and related costs of health services used by women and babies from pregnancy to 12‐month postbirth.MethodsWe used linked administrative data from one state of Australia, which contained all births in Queensland between 01/07/2017 and 30/06/2018. Descriptive analyses were used to identify the 10 most frequent reasons and related costs for accessing inpatient, outpatient, emergency department, and Medicare services. These are reported separately for women and babies in different periods.ResultsWe included 58,394 births in our data set. The results have highlighted that there was relatively uniform use of inpatient, outpatient, and Medicare services by women and babies, with the 10 most common services accounting for more than half of the total services accessed. However, the emergency department service use was more diverse. Medicare services accounted for the greatest volume (79.21%) of service events but only 10.21% of the overall funding, compared with inpatient services, which accounted for less volume (3.62%) but the highest amount of overall funding (75.19%).ConclusionStudy findings provide empirical evidence about the full spectrum of services used by birthing families and their babies, and could assist health providers and managers to understand the services women and infants actually access during pregnancy, birth, and postbirth.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Reference42 articles.

1. United Nations Department of Economic Social Affairs.2019 Revision of World Population Prospects.2019.

2. National Health Spending In 2012: Rate Of Health Spending Growth Remained Low For The Fourth Consecutive Year

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