1.Evidence of a Broken Healthcare Delivery System in Korea: Unnecessary Hospital Outpatient Utilization among Patients with a Single Chronic Disease Without Complications.
Jin Yong LEE ; Min Woo JO ; Weon Seob YOO ; Hyun Joo KIM ; Sang Jun EUN
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2014;29(12):1590-1596
This study aims to estimate the volume of unnecessarily utilized hospital outpatient services in Korea and quantify the total cost resulting from the inappropriate utilization. The analysis included a sample of 27,320,505 outpatient claims from the 2009 National Inpatient Sample database. Using the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), patients were considered to have received 'unnecessary hospital outpatient utilization' if they had a CCI score of 0 and were concurrently admitted to hospital for treatment of a single chronic disease - hypertension (HTN), diabetes mellitus (DM), or hyperlipidemia (HL) - without complication. Overall, 85% of patients received unnecessary hospital services. Also hospitals were taking away 18.7% of HTN patients, 18.6% of DM and 31.6% of HL from clinics. Healthcare expenditures from unnecessary hospital outpatient utilization were estimated at: HTN (94,058 thousands USD, 38.6% of total expenditure); DM (17,795 thousands USD, 40.6%) and HL (62,876 thousands USD, 49.1%). If 100% of patients who received unnecessary hospital outpatient services were redirected to clinics, the estimated savings would be 104,226 thousands USD. This research proves that approximately 85% of hospital outpatient utilizations are unnecessary and that a significant amount of money is wasted on unnecessary healthcare services; thus burdening the National Health Insurance Service (NHIS) and patients.
Chronic Disease/*economics/*epidemiology/therapy
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Comorbidity
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Delivery of Health Care/economics/utilization
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Health Care Costs/*statistics & numerical data
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Humans
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Outpatient Clinics, Hospital/*economics/*utilization
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Patient Admission/economics/statistics & numerical data
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Prevalence
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
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Unnecessary Procedures/*economics/*utilization
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Utilization Review
2.Educational Differences in Health Care Utilization in the Last Year of Life among South Korean Cancer Patients.
Soo Young CHOO ; Sang Yi LEE ; Chul Woung KIM ; Su Young KIM ; Tae Ho YOON ; Hai Rim SHIN ; Ok Ryun MOON
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2007;40(1):36-44
OBJECTIVES: There have been few studies examining the differences in health care utilization across social classes during the last year of life. Therefore, in this study we analyzed the quantitative and qualitative differences in health care utilization among cancer patients across educational classes in their last year of life, and derived from it implications for policy. METHODS: To evaluate health care utilization by cancer patients in the last year of life, Death certificate data from 2004 were merged with National Health Insurance data (n=60,088). In order to use educational level as a social class index, we selected the individuals aged 40 and over as study subjects (n=57,484). We analyzed the differences in the medical expenditures, admission days, and rates of admission experience across educational classes descriptively. Multiple regression analysis was conducted to evaluate the association between medical expenditures and independent variables such as sex, age, education class, site of death and type of cancer. RESULTS: The upper educational class spent much more on medical expenditures in the last one year of life, particularly during the last month of life, than the lower educational class did. The ratio of monthly medical expenditures per capita between the college class and no education class was 2.5 in the last 6-12 months of life, but the ratio was 1.6 in the last 1 month. Also, the lower the educational class, the higher the proportion of medical expenditures during the last one month of life, compared to total medical expenditures in the last one year of life. The college educational class had a much higher rate of admission experiences in tertiary hospitals within Seoul than the other education classes did. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that the lower educational classes had qualitative and quantitative disadvantages in utilizing health care services for cancer in the last year of life.
Terminal Care/economics/*utilization
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*Social Class
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Patient Admission/statistics & numerical data
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*Neoplasms/economics/epidemiology/therapy
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Middle Aged
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Male
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Korea/epidemiology
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Humans
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Health Services/economics/*utilization
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Health Expenditures/*statistics & numerical data/trends
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Educational Status
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Death Certificates
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Aged
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Adult