Incremental healthcare utilisation and costs among new senior high-cost users in Ontario, Canada: a retrospective matched cohort study

Author:

Muratov Sergei,Lee Justin,Holbrook Anne,Guertin Jason Robert,Mbuagbaw LawrenceORCID,Paterson John Michael,Gomes Tara,Pequeno Priscila,Tarride Jean-Eric

Abstract

ObjectivesTo describe healthcare use and spending before and on becoming a new (incident) senior high-cost user (HCU) compared with senior non-HCUs; to estimate the incremental costs, overall and by service category, attributable to HCU status; and to quantify its monetary impact on the provincial healthcare budget in Ontario, Canada.DesignWe conducted a retrospective, population-based comparative cohort study using administrative healthcare records. Incremental healthcare utilisation and costs were determined using the method of recycled predictions allowing adjustment for preincident and incident year values, and covariates. Estimated budget impact was computed as the product of the mean annual total incremental cost and the number of senior HCUs.ParticipantsIncident senior HCUs were defined as Ontarians aged ≥66 years who were in the top 5% of healthcare cost users during fiscal year 2013 (FY2013) but not during FY2012. The incident HCU cohort was matched with senior non-HCUs in a ratio of 1 HCU:3 non-HCU.ResultsSenior HCUs (n=175 847) reached the annual HCU threshold of CAD$10 192 through different combinations of incurred costs. Although HCUs had higher healthcare utilisation and costs at baseline, HCU status was associated with a substantial spike in both, with prolonged hospitalisations playing a major role. Twelve per cent of HCUs reached the HCU expenditure threshold without hospitalisation. Compared with non-HCUs (n=5 27 541), HCUs incurred an additional CAD$25 527 per patient in total healthcare costs; collectively CAD$4.5 billion or 9% of the 2013 Ontario healthcare budget. Inpatient care had the highest incremental costs: CAD$13 427, 53% of the total incremental spending.ConclusionsCosts attributable to incident senior HCU status accounted for almost 1/10 of the provincial healthcare budget. Prolonged hospitalisations made a major contribution to the total incremental costs. A subgroup of patients that became HCU without hospitalisation requires further investigation.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research Drug Safety and Effectiveness Cross-Disciplinary Training Program

ICES, an independent research institute funded by the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care

Program for Assessment of Technology in Health, The Research Institute of St Joe’s Hamilton, St Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton

Ontario Drug Policy Research Network

Ontario Graduate Scholarship

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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