TY - JOUR
T1 - Costs of Australian intensive care
T2 - A systematic review
AU - Carrandi, Alayna
AU - Liew, Cheelim
AU - Maiden, Matthew J.
AU - Litton, Edward
AU - Taylor, Colman
AU - Thompson, Kelly
A2 - Higgins, Alisa
N1 - Funding Information:
Alisa Higgins is supported by an NHMRC Emerging Leader Fellowship (GNT2008447). Edward Litton is supported by an NHMRC Emerging Leadership Fellowship. Kelly Thompson is supported by an NHMRC Emerging Leader Fellowship (APP1194058)
Funding Information:
Alisa Higgins is supported by an NHMRC Emerging Leader Fellowship (GNT2008447). Edward Litton is supported by an NHMRC Emerging Leadership Fellowship (APP2017081). Kelly Thompson is supported by an NHMRC Emerging Leader Fellowship (APP1194058).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/6
Y1 - 2024/6
N2 - Objective: Intensive care unit (ICU) cost estimates are critical to achieving healthcare system efficiency and sustainability. We aimed to review the published literature describing ICU costs in Australia. Design: A systematic review was conducted to identify studies that estimated the cost of ICU care in Australia. Studies conducted in specific patient cohorts or on specific treatments were excluded. Data sources: Relevant studies were sourced from a previously published review (1970–2016), a systematic search of MEDLINE and EMBASE (2016–5 May 2023), and reference checking. Review methods: A tool was developed to assess study quality and risk of bias (maximum score 57/57). Total and component costs were tabulated and indexed to 2022 Australian Dollars. Costing methodologies and study quality assessments were summarised. Results: Six costing studies met the inclusion criteria. Study quality scores were low (15/41 to 35/47). Most studies were conducted only in tertiary metropolitan public ICUs; sample sizes ranged from 100 to 10,204 patients. One study used data collected within the past 10 years. Mean daily ICU costs ranged from $966 to $5381 and mean total ICU admission costs $4888 to $14,606. Three studies used a top-down costing approach, deriving cost estimates from budget reports. The other three studies used both bottom-up and top-down costing approaches. Bottom-up approaches collected individual patient resource use. Conclusions: Available ICU cost estimates are largely outdated and lack granular data. Future research is needed to estimate ICU costs that better reflect current practice and patient complexity and to determine the best methods for generating these estimates.
AB - Objective: Intensive care unit (ICU) cost estimates are critical to achieving healthcare system efficiency and sustainability. We aimed to review the published literature describing ICU costs in Australia. Design: A systematic review was conducted to identify studies that estimated the cost of ICU care in Australia. Studies conducted in specific patient cohorts or on specific treatments were excluded. Data sources: Relevant studies were sourced from a previously published review (1970–2016), a systematic search of MEDLINE and EMBASE (2016–5 May 2023), and reference checking. Review methods: A tool was developed to assess study quality and risk of bias (maximum score 57/57). Total and component costs were tabulated and indexed to 2022 Australian Dollars. Costing methodologies and study quality assessments were summarised. Results: Six costing studies met the inclusion criteria. Study quality scores were low (15/41 to 35/47). Most studies were conducted only in tertiary metropolitan public ICUs; sample sizes ranged from 100 to 10,204 patients. One study used data collected within the past 10 years. Mean daily ICU costs ranged from $966 to $5381 and mean total ICU admission costs $4888 to $14,606. Three studies used a top-down costing approach, deriving cost estimates from budget reports. The other three studies used both bottom-up and top-down costing approaches. Bottom-up approaches collected individual patient resource use. Conclusions: Available ICU cost estimates are largely outdated and lack granular data. Future research is needed to estimate ICU costs that better reflect current practice and patient complexity and to determine the best methods for generating these estimates.
KW - Administration and health services
KW - Anaesthesia and intensive care
KW - Economics
KW - Intensive care
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85196665747&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ccrj.2024.03.003
DO - 10.1016/j.ccrj.2024.03.003
M3 - Review Article
C2 - 39072237
AN - SCOPUS:85196665747
SN - 1441-2772
VL - 26
SP - 153
EP - 158
JO - Critical Care and Resuscitation
JF - Critical Care and Resuscitation
IS - 2
ER -