Activity‐based costs of blood transfusions in surgical patients at four hospitals
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center · University Hospital of Zurich · +1 more institution
Abstract
Blood utilization has long been suspected to consume more health care resources than previously reported. Incomplete accounting for blood costs has the potential to misdirect programmatic decision making by health care systems. Determining the cost of supplying patients with blood transfusions requires an in-depth examination of the complex array of activities surrounding the decision to transfuse. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: To accurately determine the cost of blood in a surgical population from a health system perspective, an activity-based costing (ABC) model was constructed. Tasks and resource consumption (materials, labor, third-party services, capital) related to blood administration were identified prospectively at two US and two European hospitals. Process frequency (i.e., usage) data were captured retrospectively from each hospital and used to populate the ABC model.
All major process steps, staff, and consumables to provide red blood cell (RBC) transfusions to surgical patients, including usage frequencies, and direct and indirect overhead costs contributed to per-RBC-unit costs between $522 and $1183 (mean, $761 +/- $294). These exceed previously reported estimates and were 3.2- to 4.8-fold higher than blood product acquisition costs. Annual expenditures on blood and transfusion-related activities, limited to surgical patients, ranged from $1.62 to $6.03 million per hospital and were largely related to the transfusion rate.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.20
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 43
Authors
6- ASAryeh ShanderCorresponding
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center, University Hospital of Zurich, Women's General Hospital
- AHAxel Hofmann
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center, University Hospital of Zurich, Women's General Hospital
- SOSherri Ozawa
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center, University Hospital of Zurich, Women's General Hospital
- OMOliver M. Theusinger
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center, University Hospital of Zurich, Women's General Hospital
- HGH. Gombotz
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center, University Hospital of Zurich, Women's General Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Activity-based costing
- Health care
- Population
- Emergency medicine
- Indirect costs
- Cost driver
- Blood product
- Decent work and economic growth